Words spelled with "ie" as in "cookie" follow the "i before e except after c" rule. Some examples include: believe, achieve, chief, brief, and field. It's important to note that there are exceptions to this rule, such as in words like weird, seize, and their derivatives.
cookie has short sounds in both the oo and the ie
In England, a 'biscuit' is what the US would call a 'cookie'. In England, we say cookie too, but we use the former to desribe hard baked snacks, and the latter for softer, doughy ones. What an American would call a 'biscuit', we'd say 'scone'.
A phonetically spelled word is when you spell it the way it sounds. For example, "through" would be "thru". A correctly spelled word is when it is spelled as it is found in the dictionary.
Spelled correctly ' 20/25 , which reduces to 4/5 = 80% Spelled incorrectly ' 5/25 ' , whichy reduces to 1/5 = 20%.
Swarm.
dieliepietie
yes, all the words are spelled correctly, but its a fragment ie not a complete sentece.
parties, cookie/s, field/s movie/s and brief
cookie has short sounds in both the oo and the ie
The word "friend" has a short e sound but is spelled with an ie.
IE words: * birdie * brief * belief * cookie * chief * die * diet * eerie * grief * lie * pier * preemie * relief * tie * tier * thief * shriek * wiener
"Yes" in Welsh is spelled "ie."
You would divide the word cook-ie the way i did in the word cookie
there are two cook-ie
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.
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
Very few words can be spelled with the letters lunch. Hun is one of the words that can be spelled with those letters.