Smiley said:
What gets me is adding the suffix "-able" to words that end in "e" like knowledge. What's the U.S. rule on when to remove the "e" and when to leave it in?
LightningStorm said:
Good ole' "I before E, except after C" (and all the other instances where i doesn't come before e.
I also once found a site that showed that there are instances of every character (except q) in the English alphabet that has an instance of it being silent in a word.
"I" before "E",Christopher said:
LightningStorm said:
Good ole' "I before E, except after C" (and all the other instances where i doesn't come before e.
The problem is, that's just one line of a longer mnemonic. It's meant to refer to a specific type of situation, like a specific way it's pronounced or something like that -- I forget what. But it was never meant to be a universal rule; it just gets misinterpreted that way, and unfortunately mis-taught that way.
Steve Mollmann said:
"I" before "E",
Except after "C",
Or when sounded like "A"
As in "neighbor" or "weigh".
Christopher said:
^^But even that isn't all-encompassing: height, protein, eidetic, either, Vivian Leigh. Not to mention words that do have "ie" after "c": science, ancient, efficient, policies, society, glacier.
Turtletrekker said:
I can't believe that no one has said "definite" until now.
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