C I E - meaning and definition. What is C I E
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What (who) is C I E - definition

MNEMONIC RULE OF THUMB FOR ENGLISH SPELLING
I before e; I before e except after c; I before e, except after c; I Before E Except After C; I before E; I before E rule; I before E except after C rule

I before E except after C         
"I before E, except after C" is a mnemonic rule of thumb for English spelling. If one is unsure whether a word is spelled with the digraph ei or ie, the rhyme suggests that the correct order is ie unless the preceding letter is c, in which case it may be ei.
I2C         
  • ADC]] board with I<sup>2</sup>C interface
  • DAC]], and a microcontroller), and [[pull-up resistor]]s R<sub>p</sub>
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  • I<sup>2</sup>C bus: R<sub>p</sub> are pull-up resistors, R<sub>s</sub> are optional series resistors.<ref name="i2c-spec"/>
  • date=October 2017}}</ref>
SERIAL COMMUNICATION BUS THAT CONNECTS LOW-SPEED EMBEDDED PERIPHERAL DEVICES
I2C; Inter-Integrated Circuit; IsquaredC; I2c; Inter Integrated Circuit; Inter integrated circuit; I-squared-C; Two-wire Serial Interface; I-two-C; Philips I²C; NXP I²C; Philips On-Board Communication Protocol; Inter-integrated circuit; IIC (protocol); Two-Wire Interface; Two-wire interface; Two-Wire Serial Interface; Two-wire serial interface; I²C bus; I²C protocol; I²C interface; I²C connection; I²C signal; I²C master; I²C slave; I²C address; Serial Data Line; Nexperia I²C; Philips I2C; NXP I2C; Philips IIC; NXP IIC; IIC (bus); IIC (interface); I2C bus; I2C protocol; I2C interface; I2C connection; I2C signal; I2C master; I2C slave; I2C address
Inter Integrated Circuit [<i>Additional explanations: busi>]
Cecil Edgar Tilley         
AUSTRALIAN-BRITISH MINERALOGIST (1894-1973)
C. E. Tilley
Prof Cecil Edgar Tilley FRS HFRSE PGS (14 May 1894 – 24 January 1973) was an Australian-British petrologist and geologist.

Wikipedia

I before E except after C

"I before E, except after C" is a mnemonic rule of thumb for English spelling. If one is unsure whether a word is spelled with the digraph ei or ie, the rhyme suggests that the correct order is ie unless the preceding letter is c, in which case it may be ei.

The rhyme is very well known; Edward Carney calls it "this supreme, and for many people solitary, spelling rule". However, the short form quoted above has many common exceptions; for example:

  • ie after c: species, science, sufficient
  • ei not preceded by c: seize, vein, weird, their, feisty, foreign

The proportion of exceptions can be reduced by restricting application of the rule based on the sound represented by the spelling. Two common restrictions are:

  • excluding cases where the spelling represents the "long a" sound (the lexical sets of FACE and perhaps SQUARE ). This is commonly expressed by continuing the rhyme "or when sounding like A, as in neighbor or weigh"
  • including only cases where the spelling represents the "long e" sound (the lexical sets of FLEECE and perhaps NEAR and happY ).

Variant pronunciations of some words (such as heinous and neither) complicate application of sound-based restrictions, which do not eliminate all exceptions. Many authorities deprecate the rule as having too many exceptions to be worth learning.