Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for April 17, 2017

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    Dtroutma  about 7 years ago

    I said that when I was Danae’s age! Lies, not “rules” or “Laws” with English! Fake!

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    Superfrog  about 7 years ago

    Some of the contradictions are exceptional and some of the exceptions are contradictory.

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    somebodyshort  about 7 years ago

    Much of the written English language was standardized with the King James version of he bible.

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    dadoctah  about 7 years ago

    “I before E except after C” is a rule thought up by some weird ancient foreign scientist.

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    Can't Sleep  about 7 years ago

    Danae was funnier when she didn’t sound like the government.

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    Mr.Bubbles2257  about 7 years ago

    Why do people remember only half of the rule

    Why do people remember only half of the rule?.I before E except after C,Or when sounded as “a”As in “neighbor” or “weigh.”.This does not confront all the exceptions, but it cuts down some of them..https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:English_words_not_following_the_I_before_E_except_after_C_rule

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    Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 7 years ago

    And I often get the underline when I type colour, and labour, and neighbour.

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    SiteeSatee Premium Member about 7 years ago

    The rule is, I before E except after C, except when weird atheist science societies, seeing eight beige reindeer heifers reign and neigh, and sufficiently efficient albeit bouncier species, seize their ancient fallacies of deintellectualized deities agreeing to forfeit the reins, while heir Keith inveigles to reinforce or reinvent a surfeit of fancier, juicier, counterfeit caffeine freight weighing eight glaciers, herein a feint.

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    gammaguy  about 7 years ago

    I before he, except after she.

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    TossedSaladCartoon  about 7 years ago

    The spelling rules aren’t nearly as odd as the pronunciation rules. Tomb, comb and bomb sound nothing alike. This is “fun” to explain to a child just learning to read!

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    Ignatz Premium Member about 7 years ago

    Those aren’t contradictions, they’re exceptions.

    Language develops dynamically, through usage, and without rules. Grammarians figure out the “rules” after the fact, they don’t invent them. So there are always exceptions.

    Pronunciation is a mess because English is an amalgam of several other languages, and Samuel Johnson thought it was important to maintain a word’s origin in the spelling of the word.

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    whiteheron  about 7 years ago

    Rules are meant to be broken.

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    dwayne1961decker  about 7 years ago

    LOL – Yay Danae! (I love that kid!)

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    John M  about 7 years ago

    In UK schools were told to stop teaching it in 2009 – http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8110573.stm

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    Pointspread  about 7 years ago

    I never understood that rule.

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    sandpiper  about 7 years ago

    Years ago I ran across a list of language exceptions, each with an example except for the last. That exception showed no example. Very good try at making something from nothing. If I can find it again, I will post the url.

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    Masterskrain Premium Member about 7 years ago

    As Carlin said; "Einstein has it wrong TWICE in his name!

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    garcoa  about 7 years ago

    The only general rule of the English Language are there are no general rules.

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    tripwire45  about 7 years ago

    Wiley just cannot let it go.

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    IQTech61  about 7 years ago

    And then people wonder why I will not accept would of, could of and should of. English is contradictory enough already.

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    Alida_L  about 7 years ago

    Or when pronounced “a” as in neighbor and weigh.

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    Holden Awn  about 7 years ago

    Why did Danae cite “ancient”? It fits the rule.

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    pshapley  about 7 years ago

    English isn’t fake news. Rules of grammar and pronunciation are.

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    phoenixnyc  about 7 years ago

    Here’s the deal, children. Combine the following in a blender:

    1 bottle Greek olive oil1 bottle Italian (Latin) balsamic vinegar3 bottles German beer1 bottle French wine1/2 bottle Scandinavian meadfew dashes Japanese sakeDashes of several other drinks from around the globe

    Blend on high for 1 minute.

    Voila. You have English.

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    Masterskrain Premium Member about 7 years ago

    English is a “Mutt” Language, with roots in dozens of earlier languages. THAT’S why it’s so screwed up!

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    dflak  about 7 years ago

    The only way to spell correctly in English is through rote memorization. Just memorize the spelling of every English word and you’re set!

    .

    Trying to spell a word based on what it sounds like works about 95% of the time. 95% sounds nice until you realize that you will spell every 20th word incorrectly. In your typical 3,000 word magazine article that’s 150 misspellings.

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    Robin Hislop  about 7 years ago

    Discontinued in UK schools. Covered on British TV ‘Qi’, it’s hilarious watching a patient man getting more and more wound up, but a variety of comedians, and Dan Radcliffe.https://youtu.be/duqlZXiIZqA

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    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 7 years ago

    “The problem with defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore. We don’t just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.”

    —James Nicoll, 1990
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    Fan o’ Lio.  about 7 years ago

    English spellings are more like pictographs.

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    Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 7 years ago

    Ghoti, an alternate spelling for fish. (Bernard Shaw)

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