Kids are taught a cute little tip to help them spell words that goes like this: “I” before “E” except after “C”. But, then, how do you explain this:
“It is weird how the inadequacies of science weigh so heavily on our society.”
Yeah.
Tags: English, language, spelling
This entry was posted by Dossy Shiobara on Monday, August 20th, 2007 at 11:22 pm and is filed under Education. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

I hate to go back to the 80s here, but can you phone in an order with multiple credit cards?
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It’s accurate, if I’m not mistaken, roughly half of the time. Though I wouldn’t really use “inadequacies” as an example, seeing as it’s only a pluralisation of “inadequacy.”
You mean “weigh”, not “weighs”, since “inadequacies” is a plural subject.
So, knowing the “I before E except after C” thing vs. arbitrarily guessing–which yields a 50% chance of being right, which is equivalent to “I before E except after C” being right half the time–doesn’t really help.
I suspect that most common words, the 300-400 that are in the typical average person’s limited vocabulary, do follow the “I before E except after C” hint.
Joe: Yeah, you’re right, it should be “weigh” … which makes the sentence seem even more bizarre than it already is.