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October 5th 04 12:56 PM

On Ebay Now!!
 
Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455 many
thanks



Jim Watt October 6th 04 12:15 AM

On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455 many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com

operator jay October 6th 04 06:53 AM


"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455

many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com


Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)

j



nog October 6th 04 07:56 AM

On Tue, 5 Oct 2004 23:53:39 -0500, operator jay wrote:

"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455

many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com


Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)


And some fell upon stony ground, ... :^)

infobegger October 17th 04 11:24 PM

nog wrote in message ...
On Tue, 5 Oct 2004 23:53:39 -0500, operator jay wrote:

"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455

many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com


Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)


And some fell upon stony ground, ... :^)


....No one likes a smart arse.

soup October 18th 04 09:35 AM

infobegger popped their head over the parapet saw what was going on and
said
nog wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Oct 2004 23:53:39 -0500, operator jay wrote:

"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little
bit extra go here

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455
many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com

Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)


And some fell upon stony ground, ... :^)


...No one likes a smart arse.


"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)

--
yours S

Nihil curo de ista tua stulta superstitione



John Porcella October 18th 04 10:43 PM


"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)



Is science to blame?


--
MESSAGE ENDS.
John Porcella



DeBaggio October 19th 04 02:28 AM

"soup" wrote in message
.uk...
"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)


So the word 'Reign' doesn't exist then?



Ron Morgan October 19th 04 02:34 AM

On 19 Oct, DeBaggio wrote:

"soup" wrote in message
.uk...
"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)


So the word 'Reign' doesn't exist then?


That's strange, even weird!

--
Re-live the CCl4 VIEWDATA BBS http://www.ccl4.org/
That's cc L 4

After playing with yours yesterday, I don't like it, way way way too slow.

Max Demian October 19th 04 01:37 PM

"DeBaggio" wrote in message
...
"soup" wrote in message
.uk...
"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)


So the word 'Reign' doesn't exist then?


It's 'i' before 'e' except after 'c' *when the sound is 'ee'*.

OK, that's sorted that out.

--
Max Demian



soup October 19th 04 04:28 PM

soup popped their head over the parapet saw what was going on and said
infobegger popped their head over the parapet saw what was going on
and said
nog wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Oct 2004 23:53:39 -0500, operator jay wrote:

"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little
bit extra go here

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455
many thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com

Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)

And some fell upon stony ground, ... :^)


...No one likes a smart arse.


"I" before "E" except after "C". :o)


Remember there was a rhyme we had to learn at school
that had all the exeptions, they included sheik and Sheila.
--
yours S

Nihil curo de ista tua stulta superstitione



[email protected] October 20th 04 12:48 PM

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:[i]
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 00:00:03 +0100 (BST), (Brian
{Hamilton Kelly}) wrote:

Incidentally, *none* of those "ei" and "ie" digraphs written by Walt
have an "ee" sound (to be more precise, in ASCII IPA).


Not even 'weird'?

It's sort of questionable whether the 'ei' in weird is pronounced
'ee', it's not quite the same sound as the 'ei' in receive for
example.


And then there's 'Leigh', a town in Lancashire where Santa often goes
on his sleigh.

There are quite a few proper names which break the i before e except
after c when pronounced 'ee' rule:-
Keith
Sheila
Lots of places called Leigh (and longer names with Leigh in them)


Silly language ....
;-)

What's silly about it? It's just the way it is, if you don't like it
try another one. :-)

--
Chris Green

Max Demian October 20th 04 01:35 PM

wrote in message ...[i]
In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 00:00:03 +0100 (BST), (Brian
{Hamilton Kelly}) wrote:

Incidentally, *none* of those "ei" and "ie" digraphs written by Walt
have an "ee" sound (to be more precise, in ASCII IPA).


Not even 'weird'?

It's sort of questionable whether the 'ei' in weird is pronounced
'ee', it's not quite the same sound as the 'ei' in receive for
example.


Weird is pronounced wee-erd, i.e. two sounds.

And then there's 'Leigh', a town in Lancashire where Santa often goes
on his sleigh.


Surely Santa visits *every* town in Christendom.

There are quite a few proper names which break the i before e except
after c when pronounced 'ee' rule:-
Keith
Sheila
Lots of places called Leigh (and longer names with Leigh in them)


It also doesn't explain why Keighley sounds as if it has a 'th' in it.

Silly language ....
;-)

What's silly about it? It's just the way it is, if you don't like it
try another one. :-)


It helps to confuse foreigners who don't speak it (like Americans).

--
Max Demian



[email protected] October 20th 04 09:59 PM

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:

It is exactly the same sound ... if you happen to come from a sensible
part of the UK! (Similarly, 'ant' and 'aunt' are pronounced
identically but "which" and "witch" are not!)

Oh no they aren't ('aunt'?) :-)

--
Chris Green

Brian {Hamilton Kelly} October 21st 04 08:20 PM

On Wednesday, in article

"Walt Davidson" wrote:
[i]
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 00:00:03 +0100 (BST),
(Brian
{Hamilton Kelly}) wrote:

Incidentally, *none* of those "ei" and "ie" digraphs written by Walt
have an "ee" sound (to be more precise, in ASCII IPA).


Not even 'weird'?


Nope; that's a diphthong: [[email protected]].

And then there's 'Leigh', a town in Lancashire where Santa often goes
on his sleigh.


Less than twenty miles from here, nearby to Malmesbury, are two villages
one of which is named "Leigh". However, its name is pronounced not as
[li] (like the one in Lancashire) but as [laI] (like the English word
"lye").

The locals have an excuse: the other village (literally less than four
miles away) is called "Lea", pronounced [li]!

Silly language ....
;-)


Indeed.

--
Brian {Hamilton Kelly}

"I don't use Linux. I prefer to use an OS supported by a large multi-
national vendor, with a good office suite, excellent network/internet
software and decent hardware support."

[email protected] October 22nd 04 10:25 AM

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:
On Thu, 21 Oct 2004 19:20:18 +0100 (BST), (Brian
{Hamilton Kelly}) wrote:

Not even 'weird'?


Nope; that's a diphthong: [[email protected]].


Not according to my dictionary. The phonetic pronunciation of "weird"
is shown as "werd" with a bar above the 'e'. The phonetic
pronunciation of "receive" is shown as "resev" with bars above each
'e'.

Well I think your dictionary has an odd idea of the way to pronounce
receive then, I certainly don't pronounce both syllables the same and
trying to do so makes the word sound very odd.

--
Chris Green

[email protected] October 22nd 04 10:28 PM

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:
On 22 Oct 2004 08:25:23 GMT, wrote:

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:

Not according to my dictionary. The phonetic pronunciation of "weird"
is shown as "werd" with a bar above the 'e'. The phonetic
pronunciation of "receive" is shown as "resev" with bars above each
'e'.

Well I think your dictionary has an odd idea of the way to pronounce
receive then, I certainly don't pronounce both syllables the same and
trying to do so makes the word sound very odd.


I cannot think of any other correct way to pronounce the word
"receive". Perhaps you come from Essex?


When actually speaking (as opposed to saying the word in isolation)
there is no way any normal person will make the first vowel sound
anywhere near as long as the second. In reality it will become more
like the short i in 'ridge'.

If one said 'r-ee-c-ee-ve' all the time it would sound very strange to
my mind (not to mention my ears!).

I'm desperately trying to find a dictionary but can only find a
Webster at the moment. My big Collins French/English shows the first
vowel short and the second one long.

--
Chris Green

[email protected] October 22nd 04 10:53 PM

In uk.tech.digital-tv wrote:
In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:
On 22 Oct 2004 08:25:23 GMT,
wrote:

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:

Not according to my dictionary. The phonetic pronunciation of "weird"
is shown as "werd" with a bar above the 'e'. The phonetic
pronunciation of "receive" is shown as "resev" with bars above each
'e'.

Well I think your dictionary has an odd idea of the way to pronounce
receive then, I certainly don't pronounce both syllables the same and
trying to do so makes the word sound very odd.


I cannot think of any other correct way to pronounce the word
"receive". Perhaps you come from Essex?


[snip my own waffling]

I'm desperately trying to find a dictionary but can only find a
Webster at the moment. My big Collins French/English shows the first
vowel short and the second one long.

I've now found both a Collins and a Chambers dictionary, both show the
two syllables of receive as different:-

Chambers:-

ri-sev (the e has a line over it)
according to the pronunciation guide, i as in 'pin', e (with a
line over it) as in 'lean'.


Collins:-

ri'si:v (that's not actually a colon, but looks a bit like it)
according to the pronunciation guide, i as in 'build', i: as in
'see'.


What dictionary were you looking in?

--
Chris Green

[email protected] October 23rd 04 07:49 PM

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:
On 22 Oct 2004 20:53:50 GMT, wrote:


What dictionary were you looking in?


Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary.

Of course, we are now in the Twenty-first Century, so Estuary English
has become accepted as the norm.
:-(

So how is that my Chambers disagrees with your Chambers?

--
Chris Green

Brian {Hamilton Kelly} October 25th 04 10:56 PM

On Friday, in article

"Walt Davidson" wrote:

On 22 Oct 2004 08:25:23 GMT,
wrote:

In uk.tech.digital-tv Walt Davidson wrote:

Not according to my dictionary. The phonetic pronunciation of "weird"
is shown as "werd" with a bar above the 'e'. The phonetic
pronunciation of "receive" is shown as "resev" with bars above each
'e'.

Well I think your dictionary has an odd idea of the way to pronounce
receive then, I certainly don't pronounce both syllables the same and
trying to do so makes the word sound very odd.


I cannot think of any other correct way to pronounce the word
"receive". Perhaps you come from Essex?


Chambers' shows "risev", with a bar above the 'e'. This would be close
to Oxford Pronunciation. It's certainly nothing like hearing ree-seev,
as you suggest. Moreover, nowadays I think most people tend to pronounce
the first syllable with a schwa.

--
Brian {Hamilton Kelly}

"I don't use Linux. I prefer to use an OS supported by a large multi-
national vendor, with a good office suite, excellent network/internet
software and decent hardware support."

Brian {Hamilton Kelly} October 25th 04 11:00 PM

On Saturday, in article

"Walt Davidson" wrote:

On 22 Oct 2004 20:53:50 GMT,
wrote:


What dictionary were you looking in?


Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary.


Which edition? I have the 1983, 1993, and 1998 editions here, and all of
them show the first vowel as "i", pronounced as in pin. I would
seriously doubt that users in an earlier age would have used a long -ee-
in the first syllable either, since speech tended to be *more* clipped in
those days. Are you sure you don't need a magnifying glass?

Of course, we are now in the Twenty-first Century, so Estuary English
has become accepted as the norm.
:-(


Chambers published a "Twenty-First Century Dictionary" in 1999; it was
bloody awful, omitting tens of thousands of words to "reflect modern
usage". Since the "proper" Chambers has always been the dictionary of
recourse for cruciverbalists (both setters and solvers), this was
ignored. I have the 2003 edition of "Chambers Dictionary" on order at
present: this follows the tradition of the older editions in having just
about everything that's ever existed listed. (Not quite everything;
sometimes one needs the full OED;-)

(I've also been wondering how Chambers' can show the e-macron glyph (to
represent an -ee- sound) in "weird". Then it dawned upon me that Messrs
Chambers were Scottish, so wee-rrrr-d would not be so weird to them.
However, I think you'll find that most *English* speakers *do* pronounce
the "ei" as a diphthong, as I first posted.)

--
Brian {Hamilton Kelly}

"I don't use Linux. I prefer to use an OS supported by a large multi-
national vendor, with a good office suite, excellent network/internet
software and decent hardware support."

[email protected] October 27th 04 12:15 PM

On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 18:04:59 +0100, Walt Davidson
wrote:



By the way, to be pedantic, it is Chambers's Twentieth Century
Dictionary.


If that is the 1901 edition it must be worth a bob or two. So which
edition is it?

--
l

Cliff December 3rd 04 08:47 AM

People actually turn you in. Most times competitors.
if you mispell then your item won't sell. I suggest you look for other
sellers with very high feedbacks and turn them in also.
www.camnix.com/filter


"infobegger" wrote in message
om...
nog wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Oct 2004 23:53:39 -0500, operator jay wrote:

"Jim Watt" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 10:56:00 GMT, "-V-TECH-"
wrote:

Looking for a first class satellite reciever and that little bit extra
go
here http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.d...tem=5724309455

many
thanks

Do they auction spell checkers as well as satelitte Recievers?


--
Jim Watt
http://www.gibnet.com

Thinking one might help with words like satelitte, are you? :-)


And some fell upon stony ground, ... :^)


...No one likes a smart arse.




Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics) December 3rd 04 09:44 AM

In article [email protected], Cliff
wrote:

I suggest you look for other



I suggest you read this:

http://www.allmyfaqs.com/faq.pl?How_to_post

--
AJL Electronics (G6FGO) Ltd : Satellite and TV aerial systems
http://www.classicmicrocars.co.uk : http://www.ajlelectronics.co.uk


Lloyd December 3rd 04 06:28 PM

Not a bad suggestion.


"Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics)" wrote in message
. ..
In article [email protected], Cliff
wrote:

I suggest you look for other



I suggest you read this:

http://www.allmyfaqs.com/faq.pl?How_to_post

--
AJL Electronics (G6FGO) Ltd : Satellite and TV aerial systems
http://www.classicmicrocars.co.uk : http://www.ajlelectronics.co.uk




Keith W January 30th 05 02:00 PM


"Nigel M" wrote in message
...
In uk.tech.digital-tv, Max Demian wrote:

It's 'i' before 'e' except after 'c' *when the sound is 'ee'*.


What about Sheila?

--
Nigel M


She's with Keith! 8-)

Keith



Yoggle February 1st 05 12:46 AM

Nigel M wrote:

In uk.tech.digital-tv, Max Demian wrote:

It's 'i' before 'e' except after 'c' *when the sound is 'ee'*.


What about Sheila?



What about reign?


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