"I" goes before "E" except atfter "C"
( 'nuff said)
In English, 'ie' is usually pronounced as "ee" like in the word "believe," and 'ei' is usually pronounced as "ay" like in the word "receive."
If you mean words that have the same sound as ie or ei such as receive or believe that is a long ee sound :- speed, reed, deed, read, heed, mead, need, knead.
The word "friend" has a short e sound but is spelled with an ie.
"Yes" in Welsh is spelled "ie."
Yes. The IE has the same long E sound as EI in words such as believe, relieve, and reprieve.
In English, 'ie' is usually pronounced as "ee" like in the word "believe," and 'ei' is usually pronounced as "ay" like in the word "receive."
Just to add, FYI, the general rule for helping remember if a word should be spelled with "ie" or "ei" is: "I" before "E" except after "C". In other words, "receive" is spelled with a "c", so the "c" requires that you use the "ei" spelling after it. A word such as "believe" has an "l", not a "c", so it needs the "ie" spelling.
If you mean words that have the same sound as ie or ei such as receive or believe that is a long ee sound :- speed, reed, deed, read, heed, mead, need, knead.
well another word for capture would be take but with an ie or ei im not sure
Foreign.
soldier
the answer is foreign
Achieve
One word that rhymes with "neigh" and contains either "ei" or "ie" is "bouillie," a French term for a type of porridge.
Protein
yield
weird