I vote that "i before e except after c" is the most useless rule ever thunk up. It's more like: i before e except after c ...and except for 'neighbor', and 'leisure' and 'seizure', and words that rhyme with 'weigh' (including when you add a 't' to the end of the aforementioned, as in "weight and "height"), and don't forget 'weird', and words of Germanic origin like 'weiner' and 'abseil'... and of course 'e' comes first when you're singing "Old MacDonald Had a Farm"... ARGGHHHHHH! [/rant]
um... I think you've forgotten the end of the rule! it's: I before E except after C when the sound is 'ee' I'm sure there are still loads of exceptions, but that's what spellcheckers are for!
oh. oops. :& But that still doesn't explain "leisure", "seizure", "weird", "weiner" and Old MacDonald had a farm "eieio".
heheheh. well, 'leisure' is a problem with your pronunciation, not the rule ;-P The others are exceptions, but hey, that's what makes English cool, right?
Hey wow, I never thought of that. Lezure. Lezzzzzzure. "Jeeves, I'll be wearing my lezzzure suit tonight. Please bring the Jag-u-ar out front. We're behind shhhedule." Brit-English is da bomb. Only they can cram 30 syllables into 2, like: Leicester (lester) Square and Worcestershire (wooster-sher) sauce.
I didn't know there was more to that rule...I just have always heard I before E except after C. Of course, now knowing there is more to it...it still doesn't make a lick of since to me. Oh welll...gotta love spell check!
Well, I always thought it was 'i' before 'e' except after 'c' and when sounding like 'ei' as in 'neighbor' and 'weigh'.... but it never explained 'science' or 'weird', which is how I describe the little rhyme.
Not to criticize, but the entire poem is: I before E Except after C or when sounded as A as in Neighing and Weigh
It's English, get used to it. Unless you're American, in which case just reform the language so that things fit your expectations.
Posts by Sax_Machine: 1572 Posts by Sax_Machine bashing Americans: 1536 OK, you win, mate. You can have Boston back.
While full of exceptions to the rules, English is remarkably consistent when considering that it is made up of words and expressions from other languages from all over the world. I am not claiming that it is superior, but that it does not always deserve the criticism is receives--which, by the way, came from Middle English-to Old North French- to Latin.