I before E except after C explained

pronounced as /notice/

"I before E, except after C" is a mnemonic rule of thumb for English spelling. If one is unsure whether a word is spelled with the digraph or, the rhyme suggests that the correct order is unless the preceding letter is, in which case it may be .

The rhyme is very well known; Edward Carney calls it "this supreme, and for many people solitary, spelling rule". However, the short form quoted above has many common exceptions; for example:

The proportion of exceptions can be reduced by restricting application of the rule based on the sound represented by the spelling. Two common restrictions are:

Variant pronunciations of some words (such as heinous and neither) complicate application of sound-based restrictions, which do not eliminate all exceptions. Many authorities deprecate the rule as having too many exceptions to be worth learning.

History of the spellings

The Middle English language evolved from Old English after the Norman conquest, adding many loanwords from Norman French, whose sounds and spellings changed and were changed by the older English customs. In French loanwords, the digraph generally represented the sound pronounced as /[eː]/, while represented pronounced as /[ɛː]/; was later extended to signify pronounced as /[eː]/ in non-French words. In the Great Vowel Shift, sounds pronounced as /[eː]/ and pronounced as /[ɛː]/ were raised to pronounced as /[iː]/ and pronounced as /[eː]/ respectively. Later, the meetmeat merger saw the vowel in many pronounced as /[eː]/ words change to pronounced as /[iː]/, so that meat became a homonym of meet, while conceive now rhymed with believe.[2] [3]

Early Modern English spelling was not fixed; many words were spelled with and interchangeably, in printed works of the 17th century and private correspondence of educated people into the 19th century.

History of the mnemonic

The mnemonic (in its short form) is found as early as 1866, as a footnote in Manual of English Spelling,[4] edited by schools inspector James Stuart Laurie from the work of a Tavistock schoolmaster named Marshall.[5] Michael Quinion surmises the rhyme was already established before this date. An 1834 manual states a similar rule in prose;[6] others in 1855 and 1862 use different rhymes.[7] [8] Many textbooks from the 1870s on use the same rhyme as Laurie's book.

The restriction to the "long e" sound is explicitly made in the 1855 and 1862 books, and applied to the "I before E except after C" rhyme in an 1871 manual.[9] Mark Wainwright's FAQ posting on the alt.usage.English newsgroup characterises this restricted version as British.[10] The restriction may be implicit, or may be explicitly included as an extra line such as "when the sound is e" placed before[10] or after the main part of the rhyme.

A longer form excluding the "long a" sound is found in Rule 37 of Ebenezer Cobham Brewer's 1880 Rules for English Spelling, along with a list of the "chief exceptions":[11]

The following rhymes contain the substance of the last three rules:—

i before e,

Except after c,

Or when sounded as "a",

As in neighbor and weigh

But seizure and seize do what they please.

"Dr Brewer" is credited as the author by subsequent writers quoting this form of the rhyme,[12] [13] [14] which became common in American schools.

A Dictionary of Modern English Usage discusses "i before e except after c". Henry Watson Fowler's original 1926 edition called the rule "very useful", restricting it to words with the "long e" sound, stating further that "words in which that sound is not invariable, as either, neither, inveigle, do not come under it", and calling seize "an important exception".[15] The entry was retained in Ernest Gowers's 1965 revision.[16] Robert Burchfield rewrote it for the 1996 edition, stating 'the rule can helpfully be extended "except when the word is pronounced with pronounced as //eɪ//"', and giving a longer list of exceptions, including words excluded from Fowler's interpretation.[17] Robert Allen's 2008 pocket edition states, "The traditional spelling rule ' i before e except after c ' should be extended to include the statement 'when the combination is pronounced -ee- '".[18] Jeremy Butterfield's 2015 edition suggests both "when ... pronounced -ee-" and "except when ... pronounced -ay-" as extensions to the rhyme, as well as listing various classes of exception.[19]

In 1932 Leonard B. Wheat examined the rules and word lists found in various American elementary school spelling books. He calculated that, of the 3,876 words listed, 128 had ei or ie in the spelling; of these, 83 conformed to I-before-E, 6 to except-after-C, and 12 to sounded-like-A. He found 14 words with i-e in separate syllables, and 2 with e-i in separate syllables. This left 11 "irregular" words: 3 with cie (ancient, conscience, efficiency) and 8 with ei (either, foreign, foreigner, height, leisure, neither, seize, their). Wheat concluded, "If it were not for the fact that the jingle of the rule makes it easy to remember (although not necessarily easy to apply), the writer would recommend that the rule be reduced to 'I usually comes before e,' or that it be discarded entirely".[20]

Modern views

Sandra Wilde in 1990 claimed the sounded-like-E version of the rule was one of only two sound–letter correspondence rules worth teaching in elementary schools. The rule was covered by five of nine software programs for spelling education studied by Barbara Mullock in 2012.[21]

Edward Carney's 1994 Survey of English Spelling describes the ["long-e" version of the] rule as "peculiar":[22] As to the usefulness of the rule, he says:[23] The converse of the "except after c" part is Carney's spelling-to-sound rule E.16: in the sequence ⟨cei⟩, the ⟨ei⟩ is pronounced pronounced as //iː//.[24] In Carney's test wordlist, all eight words with ⟨cei⟩ conform to this rule, which he thus describes as being a "marginal" rule with an "efficiency" of 100%.[24] Rarer words not in the wordlist may not conform; for example, in haecceity, ceilidh, and enceinte the ei represents,, and respectively.[25]

Mark Wainwright's FAQ posting interprets the rule as applying only to the FLEECE vowel, not the NEAR vowel; he regards it as useful if "a little common sense" is used for the exceptions.[10] The FAQ includes a 1996 response to Wainwright by an American, listing variations on the rule and their exceptions, contending that even the restricted version has too many exceptions, and concluding "Instead of trying to defend the 'rule' or 'guideline', "'i' before 'e' except after 'c'", why don't we all just agree that it is dumb and useless, and be content just to laugh at it?"[26]

Kory Stamper of Merriam-Webster has said the neighbor-and-weigh version is "chocked with tons of exceptions", listing several types.[27] On Language Log in 2006, Mark Liberman suggested that the alternative "i before e, no matter what" was more reliable than the basic rule.[28] On the same blog in 2009, Geoff Pullum wrote, 'The rule is always taught, by anyone who knows what they are doing, as "i before e except after c when the sound is 'ee'."'[29]

Teaching English Spelling (Cambridge University Press, 2000) provides a system of sound–spelling correspondences aimed at correcting common spelling errors among native and ESL students. The chapter "The sound 'e' (/iː/)" has sections on spellings "ee", "ea", "-y" and "ie and ei", the last of which uses "I before E except after C" and lists five "common exceptions" (caffeine, codeine, protein, seize, weird).[30]

The 2009 edition of Support for Spelling, by the English Department for Education,[31] suggests an "Extension activity" for Year five (10-year-olds):

In the Appendix, after a list of nine "useful spelling guidelines", there is a note:

There were widespread media reports of this recommendation, which generated some controversy.[32] [29]

The Oxford Dictionaries website of Oxford University Press states "The rule only applies when the sound represented is 'ee', though. It doesn't apply to words like science or efficient, in which the –ie- combination does follow the letter c but isn't pronounced 'ee'."[33]

David Crystal discusses the rule in his 2012 history of English spelling. He first restricts it to the vowel, then accounts for several classes of exception. He states that, while the exceptions are fewer and rarer than the words that follow the rule, there are too many to learn by heart; the factors are "too great to reduce to a simple rule", but "a basic knowledge of grammar and word-history" can handle them.[34]

Educationalist Greg Brooks says the long-e qualification "is hardly ever mentioned, perhaps because it is difficult to explain to children"; the except-after-C part "works very poorly"; and the mnemonic "should be consigned to oblivion".[35]

Exceptions

The following sections list exceptions to the basic form; many are not exceptions to the augmented forms.

Words that break both the "I before E" part and the "except after C" part of the rule include cheiromancies, cleidomancies, eigenfrequencies, obeisancies and oneiromancies, as well as Pleistocene from the geologic time scale.

cie

Some large groups of words have cie in the spelling. Few common words have the cei spelling handled by the rule: verbs ending -ceive and their derivatives (perceive, deceit, transceiver, receipts, etc.), and ceiling. The BBC trivia show QI claimed there were 923 words spelled cie, 21 times the number of words that conform to the rule's stated exception by being written with cei.[36] These figures were generated by a QI fan from a Scrabble wordlist.[37] The statistic was repeated by UberFacts.[38]

With the "long e" vowel

The vowel represented by ie in words spelled cie is rarely the "long e" vowel of FLEECE (pronounced as //iː//), so few words are exceptions to the version of the rule restricted to that sound. Among them are specie, species.

For those with happy-tensing accents, the final y in words ending -cy has the FLEECE vowel, and therefore so do inflected forms ending -cies or -cied (fancied, policies, etc.).

If the vowel of NEAR (pronounced as //ɪər//) is considered as "long e", then words ending -cier may also be exceptions. Possible examples include: fancier, if pronounced with two rather than three syllables; or financier, if stressed on the final syllable or pronounced with a happy-tensing accent.

With other sounds

These are exceptions to the basic and "long a" versions of the rhyme, but not to the "long e" version.

Types include:

ei not preceded by c

Many words have ei not preceded by c. In the sections that follow, most derived forms are omitted; for example, as well as seize, there exist disseize and seizure. Words are grouped by the phonemes (sounds) corresponding to ei or ie in the spelling; each phoneme is represented phonetically as at and, where applicable, by the keyword in John C. Wells' lexical sets.

An asterisk* after a word indicates the pronunciation implied is one of several found. Some have an pronounced as //iː// variant more common in America than Britain (e.g. sheikh, leisure, either have pronounced as //eɪ//, pronounced as //ɛ//, pronounced as //aɪ// respectively).

With the "long e" vowel

Words where ei, not preceded by c, represents the vowel of FLEECE (pronounced as //iː//), are the only exceptions to the strictest British interpretation of the "long e" version of the rhyme. Less strict interpretations admit as exceptions those words where eir, not preceded by c, represents the vowel of NEAR (pronounced as //ɪər//).

Some categories of exception:

Other exceptions:

pronounced as //iː// FLEECE: either*, heinous*, inveigle*, keister, leisure*, monteith, neither*, obeisance*, seize, seizin, sheikh*, teiid
  • pronounced as //ɪər// NEAR: madeira, weir, weird. (This sound may also be spelled ier, as in pierce.)
  • With the "long a" vowel

    There are many words where ei, not preceded by c, represents the vowel of FACE (pronounced as //eɪ//). There are a few where eir, not preceded by c, represents the vowel of SQUARE (pronounced as //ɛər//). These groups of words are exceptions only to the basic form of the rhyme; they are excluded from both of the common restricted forms.

    pronounced as //eɪ// FACE:
    pronounced as //ɛər// SQUARE: heir, their. (This sound is never spelled ier)

    With other sounds

    These are exceptions to the basic and "long a" versions of the rhyme, but not to the "long e" version.

    pronounced as //aɪ// PRICE:

    (This sound may also be spelled ie, but only at the end of a morpheme as in die, pies, cried.[42])

    pronounced as //ɪ// or pronounced as //ə// (see weak-vowel merger): counterfeit, cuneiform*, foreign, forfeit, reveille*, sovereign, surfeit
  • pronounced as //ɛ// DRESS: heifer, leisure*, nonpareil*, peignoir*. (This sound is spelled ie in the word friend.)
  • pronounced as //æ// TRAP: reveille*
  • pronounced as //ɜ// NURSE: O'Beirne
  • e and i in separate segments (and often separate syllables or morphemes):
  • Popular culture

    The rhyme is mentioned in several films and TV episodes about spelling bees, including A Boy Named Charlie Brown, The Simpsons episode "I'm Spelling as Fast as I Can", The Pen Is Mightier Than the Pencil episode of The Odd Couple, and an episode of Arthur; and also in the musical The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, when Huckleberry Finn is being taught how to read. The rhyme was used as a climactic plot device in the 1990 TaleSpin episode "Vowel Play" when Kit corrects Baloo's spelling by reciting the second half ("or when sounding like A, as in neighbour or weigh") of the mnemonic.

    I Before E (Except After C): Old-School Ways To Remember Stuff was a miscellany released in the UK for the Christmas 2007 "stocking filler" market,[43] which sold well.[44]

    "I Before E Except After C" is a song on Yazoo's 1982 album Upstairs at Eric's. The Jackson 5's 1970 hit "ABC" has the lyric "I before E except after C". "I before E except after C" was a 1963 episode of the TV series East Side/West Side.

    I Before E is the name of both a short-story collection by Sam Kieth and a music album by Carissa's Wierd, in each case alluding to the unusual spelling of the creator's name. Until the 1930s, Pierce City, Missouri was named "Peirce City", after Andrew Peirce. A 1982 attempt to revert to the original spelling was rejected by the United States Census Bureau.[45]

    Comedian Brian Regan employs the rule in a joke on his debut CD Live in the track Stupid in School, where he states it as "I before E, except after C, and with sounding like A, as in neighbor and weigh, and on weekends and holidays and all throughout May, and you'll always be wrong no matter what you say!"[46]

    References

    Sources

    Citations

    Notes and References

    1. The labels "long a" and "long e", discredited among educators, are used here as umbrella terms for multiple lexical sets and diaphonemes.
    2. Book: Scragg, D. G. . A History of English Spelling . 2016-03-24 . 1974 . Manchester University Press . 978-0-7190-0553-4 . 49 (text and fn.1) .
    3. Upward and Davidson 2011, pp.127–8
    4. Book: Laurie , James Stuart . Manual of English spelling. Simpkin, Marshall & Co.. 1866. 59. London. 266992241. 4 April 2013. Laurie's book erroneously lists conscience, seine, seize, and seizure under "ei" rather than under "exceptions".
    5. Laurie's Manual of English Spelling . 25 February 2011 . J. Whitaker . 15 . The Bookseller . 31 January 1867 . 109 .
    6. Book: Tallant, Anne . The practice book; containing lessons in dictating, with questions, intended to remove difficulties in English instruction, and to communicate interesting historical and natural facts . 27 February 2011 . 2nd . 1834 . J. Hatchard & Son . London . As a little confusion is experienced by scholars, when spelling verbs ending in ie, it is well to remember that when the diphthong is preceded by c, it is invariably ei,—ex: perceive, deceive, conceive, &c, and when preceded by any other consonant, ie, ex:—believe, reprieve, retrieve, &c. . 68, fn.
    7. Book: Michôd, John. Orthographic aids; or, Mnemonics for spelling and exercises in derivation. 25 February 2011. 1855. Longman. London. 9. Vowels: Rule 5.
      The Diphthong ei when it sounds like long e,
      Most frequently follows the consonant c;
      Reverse it, and then if it still sound the same,
      It follows a consonant not c by name,
      Except in such words as—counterfeit, seizure,
      Plebeian and Proper Names such as Madeira..
    8. Book: Mongan, James Roscoe . The practical spelling book . 27 February 2011 . 2nd . 1862 . Simpkin, Marshall & Co. . London. Unless preceded by a c, / The i is placed before the e. . 13, fn .
    9. Book: Colquhoun, John Stuart. A compendious grammar and philological hand-book of the English language. 27 November 2014. 1871. Griffith & Farran. 15. Rules for Spelling English Words.
    10. Web site: I before E except after C. Wainwright. Mark. September 1997. 25 February 2011. alt.english.usage. https://web.archive.org/web/20110514011758/http://alt-usage-english.org/excerpts/fxibefor.html. 14 May 2011.
    11. Book: Brewer, Ebenezer Cobham. Rules for English spelling. 24 February 2011. 1880. 48.
    12. Book: Reed, Alonzo. Word lessons: A complete speller adapted for use in the higher primary, intermediate, and grammar grades . 24 February 2011. 1884. Clark & Maynard. 101–102: §§143–146.
    13. Book: California State Board of Education . California State Board of Education . Speller. 24 February 2011. 1886. State Printing Office. 127.
    14. Book: Gillingham. Anna. Stillman. Bessie Whitmore. Anna Gillingham. Bessie Stillman. Remedial training for children with specific disability in reading, spelling, and penmanship. 24 February 2011. 1970. Educators Publishing Service. 173.
    15. Book: Fowler, Henry Watson . Henry Watson Fowler . A Dictionary of Modern English Usage . 1st . 1926 . Clarendon Press . Oxford . 556 . 318492 . https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.165977/2015.165977.A-Dictionary-Of-Modern-English-Usage#page/n567 . Spelling points; §4: Miscellaneous.
    16. Book: Fowler, Henry Watson . Henry Watson Fowler . . Fowler's Modern English Usage . 2nd . 1965 . Oxford University Press . Great Britain . 318483 . Spelling points; §4: Miscellaneous . 577–578. https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.93959/2015.93959.A-Dictionary-Of-Modern-English-Usageed2#page/n603/mode/1up.
    17. Book: Burchfield, Robert William . Robert Burchfield . The New Fowler's Modern English Usage . 3rd . 1996 . Oxford University Press . 0-19-869126-2 . 36063311 . i before e except after c . registration .
    18. Book: Allen, Robert. Pocket Fowler's Modern English Usage. https://books.google.com/books?id=XvSAl4Ng8SYC&pg=PT348. 24 March 2016. 2008-06-26. OUP Oxford. 978-0-19-923258-1. 348. i before e.
    19. Book: Butterfield, Jeremy . Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage . 4th . March 2015. Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-966135-0 . 390–391 .
    20. Wheat. Leonard B.. May 1932. Four Spelling Rules. The Elementary School Journal. University of Chicago Press. 32. 9. 697–706. 996052. 10.1086/456796. 144229809.
    21. Mullock. Barbara. 2012. An Examination of Commercial Spelling Programs for Upper Primary Level students. Australasian Journal of Special Education. 36. 2. 172–195. 1030-0112. 10.1017/jse.2012.14.
    22. Carney 1994, §2.8.2 pp.67–68
    23. Carney 1994, p.74
    24. Carney 1994, p.314
    25. See Collins English Dictionary and Webster's New World College Dictionary (4th ed.) pronunciations for haecceity, ceilidh, enceinte
    26. Web site: Bob. Cunningham. Exceptions to the rule 'I before E except after C'. 23 February 2002. FAQ. alt.usage.english. 25 February 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20101223231759/http://alt-usage-english.org/I_before_E.html. 23 December 2010.
    27. Web site: Kory . Stamper . I before E . . Ask the Editor . Merriam-Webster . 25 February 2011.
    28. Web site: Mrs. Olsen gets a D. Liberman. Mark. 18 November 2006. Language Log. University of Pennsylvania. 25 February 2011.
    29. Web site: I before E . Pullum. Geoff . 22 June 2009. Language Log. University of Pennsylvania. 25 February 2011.
    30. Book: Shemesh . Ruth . Waller . Sheila . Teaching English Spelling: A Practical Guide . 2000 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-63971-2 . 228–234 . en.
    31. Web site: Support for Spelling. February 2010. The National Strategies: Primary Framework: Literacy Framework. Department for Education. 24 February 2011. http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110222031701/http%3A//downloads.nationalstrategies.co.uk.s3.amazonaws.com/pdf/c9275388873dcd6c647ff6cf9d1a2841.pdf. 22 February 2011.
    32. Web site: I before E except after C. Quinion. Michael. 4 July 2009. World Wide Words. 24 February 2011.
    33. Web site: i before e except after c. https://archive.today/20130131045819/http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/page/142. January 31, 2013. 2010. Oxford Dictionaries Online. Oxford University Press. 24 February 2011.
    34. Book: Crystal, David. Spell It Out: The singular story of English spelling. https://archive.org/details/spellitoutcuriou0000crys/page/177 . 31 May 2014. 2012-09-06. Profile Books. 978-1-84668-568-2. 177–186. Ch.24: Spelling 'rules'.
    35. Book: Brooks . Greg . Dictionary of the British English Spelling System . July 2017 . 2015 . Open Book . 978-2-8218-7627-9 . https://books.openedition.org/obp/2188#tocfrom1n1 . 16 October 2020 . en . 6.1 ' before except after '.
    36. Web site: I Before E Except After C. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/duqlZXiIZqA . 2021-12-21 . live. QI Series 8 Ep 14 Hocus Pocus Preview. YouTube. 24 February 2011.
    37. Web site: Series H, Episode 14: Hocus Pocus. 21 December 2010. QI Talk Forum. 24 February 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110715133857/http://www.qi.com/talk/viewtopic.php?p=767810#768569. 15 July 2011.
    38. Web site: Tweet 485804692292009985 . There are 923 words in the English language that break the "I before E" rule. Only 44 words actually follow that rule.. UberFacts. 6 July 2014. Twitter. 9 November 2016.
    39. Carney 1994, §3.3.2.2 p.161
    40. Web site: Definition of capoeira. Collins English Dictionary. Collins. 4 April 2013.
    41. Carney 1994, p.168
    42. Carney 1994, §3.3.2.1 pp.151–2
    43. News: Mnemony clever ways to remember stuff. 12 December 2007. The Daily Telegraph. 25 February 2011.
    44. Web site: BA book prize lists 20. 26 August 2008. The Bookseller. 25 February 2011.
    45. News: Bureau sticks with 'i' before 'e'. United Press International. United Press International. 1 September 1982. The Bulletin. 15. 28 February 2011. Bend, Oregon.
    46. [Wikiquote:Brian Regan]