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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!cam-eng!matthew!pjh
- From: pjh@eng.cam.ac.uk (Philippa Hogben)
- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Subject: Re: I before E rule
- Message-ID: <1992Nov12.175108.12901@eng.cam.ac.uk>
- Date: 12 Nov 92 17:51:08 GMT
- References: <casseres-111192093514@missmolly.apple.com>
- Sender: anon@eng.cam.ac.uk (placeholder for future)
- Reply-To: pjh@eng.cam.ac.uk
- Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- Lines: 25
- Nntp-Posting-Host: matthew.eng.cam.ac.uk
-
- In article 111192093514@missmolly.apple.com, casseres@apple.com (David Casseres) writes:
- >I learned a pair of rules:
- >
- >1. I before E except after C, or when sounded like A as in neighbor and
- > sleigh.
- >
- >2. All the common exceptions are found in this sentence: "Neither financier
- > seized either form of weird leisure."
- >
- If you use the rule "When the sound is 'ee' then 'i' before 'e' except after 'c'"
- this accounts for all your exception except for seized.
-
- [Short pause to re-engage brain.]
-
- Having said that, I realise that I pronounce neither and either with an long
- 'i' sound for the first vowel {niy-ther, iy-ther} but the "alternative"
- pronounciation eith the long 'e' sound {nee-ther, ee-ther} is equally valid.
- "My" version of the rule doesn't account for these...
-
- Philippa
- ---
- Philippa Hogben pjh@eng.cam.ac.uk (Reverse if mailing from Janet)
- Any mistakes are mine, all mnie.
-
- I am not a .sig virus. I am a free bug.
-