sceptic, sceptical
ci,ti,ch,sc According to George Bernard Shaw there are 13 spellings for the 'sh' sound. shoe sugar ocean issue nation schist pshaw suspicion nauseous conscious chaperone mansion fuchsia
Coded information: a computer readable document. NCI-documents is non coded information: only human readable. NCI >> OCR >> CI
0.035
HUMINT and CICI = CounterIntelligenceHUMINT = HUan INTelligenceHUMINT is an intelligence collection discipline, much like SIGINT, IMINT, TECHINT, and OSINT.CI is an offensive/defensive application of methodology used to prevent the enemy from gaining access/information from/about the the intelligence collection disciplines.Imagine we have two people standing back to back, the HUMINT person is facing outwards towards the enemy, and the CI person facing inwards to the host/friendly country/service. The HUMINT person is looking for information that can be gathered from about the enemy to exploit their weaknesses and to get their information. The CI person is facing inwards and looking for vulnerabilities that the enemy may try to exploit about us. This is the basic difference.When you talk about the phrase "CI HUMINT' then you refer to the CI person using a collection methodology (namely HUMINT) to conduct their vulnerability testing. CI uses multiple methods to obtain their information, and sometimes they employ HUMINT, but this is not the rule.CI is not HUMINT, just as HUMINT is not CI. Though they may use the same methods, tools, and techniques, their targets are opposite.You use it for catching spiesCounterintelligence has two basic jobs: catching spies, and preventing them from being effective until we can catch them. The process of catching spies is a HUMINT function.Come to think of it, quite a lot of their security mission is HUMINT too.
The pronuciation is cal-ci-um. For "cal" you can use somebody shouting to another person. For "ci" you can use sea. For "um" you can use a person with a thinking puzzle.
ci ci Its Cee-Cee or ce-ce not cici
City, citation for a start.
In English, the letters "ci" typically sound like "sh" when followed by an "i" or an "e." This pronunciation is common in words like "ocean" or "special."
In Welsh, "ci dewr" is pronounced as "key doo-er." The "c" is pronounced as a hard "k" sound and the "w" is a long "oo" sound.
ce jour-ci
It is USUALLY pronounced as an s, but not always. There's the -cious words, where it has the sound 'sh': delicious precious specious meretricious etc. (not to mention 'licorice') Similarly, there the 'sh' sound for -cial words like facial and special. Also there are words that have been adopted from other languages but kept a trace of their original pronunciation: Celtic, for example. There are some other pronuniciations for ce, such as cello (pronounced 'chello'), cembalo (chembalo, with a 'k' sound). In the words foci and loci (acceptable plurals of focus and locus) the c is pronounced like a 'k'. The letter 'c' also makes the 'k' sound in the word 'arcing.'
Yes sisqo tried to sound like k-ci
words with ci sounding like sh:ambitiousatrociousauspiciousbodaciousconscientiousdeliciousfictitiousgraciousjudiciousloquaciouslusciousmalicioussalaciousspacioussuspiciousvivacious
The spellings of words reflect the way they are pronounced in their root language, not necessarily the language they become part of. For example, the silent "B" in "doubt" is from the Latin root dubitare/dubare ("to waver, to be uncertain of"). This is why some English words beginning with a "CE" and "CI" sound like they start with "S", while others (the ones that start with CA, CO, and CU) have a "K" sound.
This is cet in French. ce, cette, cet, ceci, celui-ci
glacial, gracious, spacious, conscience, specie, facial, social, official, special, racial, beneficial, judicial, provincial, superficial, crucial, delicious, precious. meretricious
In French, "these are" is translated as "ce sont" or "voici" depending on the context.