1. I Before E Except After C, And When Sounded Like A (Usually)
We usually spell things IE and not EI:
Correct: believe
Incorrect: believe
Correct: friend
Incorrect: freind
Correct: piece
Incorrect: peice
There are two exceptions:
A) When coming after the letter “c,” then it is usually spelled EI:
Correct: receive
Incorrect: recieve
Correct: ceiling
Incorrect: cieling
B) When sounding like “A”, for example:
Correct: neighbor
Incorrect: nieghbor
Correct: weigh
Incorrect: wiegh
Unfortunately, this rule is not perfect! There are even exceptions to the exceptions:
IE occurring even after C: sufficient, glacier, ancient, species
EI occurring when not after C: weird, either, seize, leisure
2. When To Double The Final Consonant
When you have a word that ends with a consonant + vowel + consonant, the final consonant can be doubled in some words, but not in others:
stop –> stopped (doubled)
transmit –> transmitting (doubled)
offer –> offered / offering (not doubled)
The final consonant is doubled if the stress falls on the final syllable. It is not doubled if the stress does not fall on it. (Short, one-syllable words always double the final consonant).
Short, one-syllable words:
stop –> stopped
get –> getting
bus –> busses
Stress on final syllable:
transMIT –> transmitted
forGET –> forgetting
Stress NOT on final syllable:
OFfer –> offered
PEDal –> pedaling
Remember, this is only for words that end in consonant-vowel-consonant. For words with other patterns (like vowel-vowel-consonant), we do not double the final consonant:
Nouns: genius, focus, virus
Adjectives: generous, religious, humorous
Note that both spellings are still pronounced -us. Do not pronounce the -ous ending like in the word “house.” Listen to the audio and note how both -us and -ous endings are pronounced -us.
care
hate
waste
late
rude
pure
positive
relate
erase
Suffixes are endings we add to words to change their function. For example:
care (verb/noun) –> careful (adjective)
late (adjective) –> lateness (noun)
pure (adjective) –> purity (noun)
When adding a suffix starting with a vowel, we usually DROP the silent “e”:
care, hate, waste, relate, erase
caring, hating, wasting, relating, erasing
pure, positive, objective
purity, positivity, objectivity
relate, erase, force, collapse
relatable, erasable, forcible, collapsible
When adding a suffix starting with a consonant, we usually KEEP the silent “e”:
care, hate, waste
careful, hateful, wasteful
late, rude, alike
lateness, rudeness, alikeness
blame, noise, shape, use
blameless, noiseless, shapeless, useless
Should You Study English Spelling Rules?
A lot of students ask me about the “rules” for English spelling, and I have to tell them honestly that English spelling is so irregular that it’s hard to explain the rules. There are some trends and patterns… but as you can see in this lesson, the trends are sometimes very detailed and even they have exceptions. In fact, when native English speakers are children, we specifically practice the subject of “spelling” in school. There are even spelling competitions!
Sometimes the more English learners try to study and memorize the “rules,” the more frustrating it gets. So if you find these rules helpful, great! But if you find them confusing, then don’t worry about them.
Some easier ways to improve your spelling are:
1. READ MORE, AND PAY ATTENTION.
The more you read, seeing English words spelled correctly, the more likely you are to spell them correctly naturally.
2. GET CORRECTIONS ON YOUR WRITING.
You can use the spell-check in programs like Microsoft Word to catch some spelling errors… but it won’t find ALL your mistakes! (For example, incorrect use of words that are pronounced the same but spelled differently, like wait and weight or there and their.)
If you join my Advanced English Grammar Course, you can get my corrections on your writing assignments. I’ll check your spelling, grammar, vocabulary, and whether you’re using the most natural phrases – and then I’ll send you feedback.