Remember learning “I before E except after C” in grade
school? I recently came across a longer version of this little ditty that
includes other exceptions. The poet bug in my veins fiddled with it some to
make it rhyme better.
I before E
except after C
or when sounding like EYE
as in HEIDI and STEIN
or spoken like SAY
as in NEIGHBOR and WEIGH
Most Americans were taught to memorize the first part of this poem. Our teachers probably
thought getting us
to spell a few I-E words correctly was at least a start given the vagaries of English. Now, of course, students can just ask Siri or Alexa.
There are
tons of exceptions to the I-E "rule", partly because English is so wonky, partly because our
language is sprinkled with words from many other tongues. Here's an example to
illustrate some of these exceptions, one that would totally frustrate ESL students.
The heinous foreigners cried heigh-ho as they seized their meister’s sleigh and eight feisty reindeer.
Want a little refresher spelling test? Insert the letters E and I in the correct order in the following words. Have fun! š
1. s - - z e
2. n - - t h e r
3. r e c - - v e
4. h - - g h t
5. f r - - n d
6. b r - - f
7. d e c - - v e
8. l - - s u r e
9. m I s c h - - f
10. w - - g h t
11. - - g h t
12. r e c - - p t
13. s l - - g h t
14. f r - - g h t
15. t h - - r
16. n - - g h b o r
17. c - - l I n g
18. s h r - - k
19. r - - g n
20. p - - c e
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