There are a large number. These words are forms of the shorter words such as die, lie, pie, tie, and vie, and the plurals or past tenses of words ending in consonant Y (e.g. cry, deny, ply).
They include dies, died, diehard, denies, replies, tried, complied, cried, relied, replied, and so forth.
No, it does not. The IE vowel pair has a short E sound, to rhyme with bend and send.(In the similarly-spelled word fiend, the IE has a long E sound.)
The word "friend" has a short e sound but is spelled with an ie.
There are many based on words that end in ie : die, lie, pie, tie, vie. Also, the past tense or plurals of some words that end in Y : denies, replies, tried, complied.
Words with the long E sound are spelled with E, AE, EA, EE, EI, IE, or an ending Y:agreebeatcarry (y often has the long e sound)deep , departeelfeelingsgeesehealivy (y = long e)jeep, jeanskeep, keyleave, lethal, litermeat , mediateneedleonlypeacequeen, queasyreason, retreatsea, see, seasonteen, teeth, teamunique ( i = long e)veal , venialwe, wheat, wheel,yeast, yieldzeal, zebrastoryhistory
Some words end in IE pronounced as E : bookie, cookie, cutie, genie, hippie, rookie Some other words where IE is pronounced as a long E: achieve, achievement believe, belief, believable camaraderie chief frieze (decor) grieve, grief, grievance liege niece piece priest reprieve retrieve relieve, relief reverie siege thief wield yield Also plurals of nouns ending in Y (Y to IE): babies, batteries, candies, copies, panties, treaties, warranties Also, past tense verbs ending in Y (Y to IE) : buried, carried, ferried, married, sullied, varied
dieliepietie
yes, all the words are spelled correctly, but its a fragment ie not a complete sentece.
No, it does not. The IE vowel pair has a short E sound, to rhyme with bend and send.(In the similarly-spelled word fiend, the IE has a long E sound.)
The word "friend" has a short e sound but is spelled with an ie.
There are many based on words that end in ie : die, lie, pie, tie, vie. Also, the past tense or plurals of some words that end in Y : denies, replies, tried, complied.
Some nouns that include the letter combination 'ie' are:beliefchiefdietfriendgrieflielienpiequietshieldsievethief
Words with the long E sound are spelled with E, AE, EA, EE, EI, IE, or an ending Y:agreebeatcarry (y often has the long e sound)deep , departeelfeelingsgeesehealivy (y = long e)jeep, jeanskeep, keyleave, lethal, litermeat , mediateneedleonlypeacequeen, queasyreason, retreatsea, see, seasonteen, teeth, teamunique ( i = long e)veal , venialwe, wheat, wheel,yeast, yieldzeal, zebrastoryhistory
Some words end in IE pronounced as E : bookie, cookie, cutie, genie, hippie, rookie Some other words where IE is pronounced as a long E: achieve, achievement believe, belief, believable camaraderie chief frieze (decor) grieve, grief, grievance liege niece piece priest reprieve retrieve relieve, relief reverie siege thief wield yield Also plurals of nouns ending in Y (Y to IE): babies, batteries, candies, copies, panties, treaties, warranties Also, past tense verbs ending in Y (Y to IE) : buried, carried, ferried, married, sullied, varied
Yes. The IE has the same long E sound as EI in words such as believe, relieve, and reprieve.
I am gay, ie I like men.
It must be mis-spelled. Gaelic doesn't have -ie.
English spelling is hard to nail down. The embalmed mummy used to be spelled mummie, and Charlie has been spelled Charly. There is also "Mummy" the baby-talk for mother, spelled with a y on analogy with Daddy.