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Itâs not even close to being a rule. See travelerâs post above for many examples, and others will want to put their two cents in.
I donât think that spelling really falls under the heading of âgrammarâ anyway, but I do find language to be fascinating. The more one reads and writes, the less trouble one has with âillogicalâ spelling, even allowing for differences between English and American standards.
The dog is NOT amused at the catâs verbosity. Yet, this time I am in agreement with the catâŠ. grammar and vocabulary are valuable. Give that cat a catnip cigar!
English is a mixture of Celtic, Teutonic, and Romance. On top of that thereâs Latin grammar which isnât always a good fit. Diagramming sentences makes sense immediately in Latin.
Walrus Gumbo Premium Member 8 days ago
Who âwokeâ the cat?
Qiset 8 days ago
âWords Unraveledâ on YouTube is great!
angier3824 Premium Member 7 days ago
codeine and seizure are also exceptions
Doug K 7 days ago
Sometimes grammar ârulesâ are weird.
Sometimes the so-called ârulesâ arenât really rules.
Grandma Lea 7 days ago
And people wonder why U.S. English is so hard to learn
backyardcowboy 7 days ago
Just say: âNeighâ
Dobber Premium Member 7 days ago
It has its roots in Germanic mythology, so not English, English rules donât apply.
LeftCoastKen Premium Member 7 days ago
I used to know someone whose screensaver read âI before E except after C is weird scienceâ.
[Traveler] Premium Member 7 days ago
I before E, except when your foreign neighbor, Keith, receives eight counterfeit beige sleighs from feisty caffeinated weightlifters. Weird!
j_e_richards 7 days ago
âI before E, except after C, or sounded as âAâ in neighbor and weightâŠand numerous other exceptions."
uniquename 7 days ago
The dog doesnât look fascinated.
Aimless Melissa 7 days ago
English is perfect.
ladykat Premium Member 7 days ago
The dog is neither amused nor interested.
Kaputnik 7 days ago
Itâs not even close to being a rule. See travelerâs post above for many examples, and others will want to put their two cents in.
I donât think that spelling really falls under the heading of âgrammarâ anyway, but I do find language to be fascinating. The more one reads and writes, the less trouble one has with âillogicalâ spelling, even allowing for differences between English and American standards.
Daltongang Premium Member 7 days ago
âShut UP, Iâm concentrating on this ball.â
skyriderwest 7 days ago
Spelling rules, not grammar rules. And really more of a suggestion than a rule.
PassinThru 7 days ago
Weird is weird.
synergywizardry 7 days ago
if it followed rule, would not be weird
theelherself 7 days ago
Seize the weird foreigner!
Medtech4 7 days ago
Why canât I have such a smart cat?
berengar 7 days ago
Yes, so âweirdâ is âweirdâ by definition. The older form was âweyrdâ and meant âfateâ, âdestinyâ.
rroxxanna Premium Member 7 days ago
If I were that dog, Iâd be happy that the cat had found something else to do rather than playing the âswat the dogâ game.
eb110americana 7 days ago
Donât you mean, âMeow, meow, meow, meow, meow?â
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member 7 days ago
The dog is NOT amused at the catâs verbosity. Yet, this time I am in agreement with the catâŠ. grammar and vocabulary are valuable. Give that cat a catnip cigar!
willie_mctell 7 days ago
English is a mixture of Celtic, Teutonic, and Romance. On top of that thereâs Latin grammar which isnât always a good fit. Diagramming sentences makes sense immediately in Latin.
Lady Bri 7 days ago
That is weird.
BWR 7 days ago
Yes, English is weird.
Goose/Geese, but not Moose/Meese.
Ox/Oxen, but not Fox/Foxen or Box/Boxen.
Mouse/Mice, but not House/Hice. And why is rice both singular AND plural?
Smeagol 7 days ago
Ismo is a Finnish stand up comic and he has lots of English word jokes.
AndrewSihler 6 days ago
Thatâs not grammar, itâs spelling (orthography), and English spelling is hugely dysfunctional.