I E stands for the "Inland Empire", an area in Southern California that cover numerous cities, as well as counties that span from approximately 40 miles inland from the west coast to the San Bernardino and Riverside counties. The Pomona Valley, although in Los Angeles county, is also included.
I live in Rialto; I'm from the I E.
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A short I E is term used to describe a hot sexy girl. with a great amazing body.
famous for being used by T- Pain
(girl walks by)
ERIC: SHORT I E
JESSE: AWH YEAHH DOEEEE
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The background dates back milleniums to the late 1900's whereby such Eur-asians dated back to the BC Era of Genghis Khan where his dog's name was I E NANAJA and can be seen in such movies as "office space"...representing a brown sand nigga
"I E nanaja!"
Genghis Khan to his dog: "i e go get your rice pilaf"
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Best chorus ever. By System Of a Down
I-E-A-I-A-I-O
I-E-A-I-A-I-O, why
As we light up the sky
W-hen the person you want to hang out with canโt hang out and all youโre doing
I-s laying in bed all day because they canโt hang out or they donโt want to hang out and your overthinking
E-verything because you think that they hate you because they might because You
N-ever know and
E-very little thing is making you mad because same
R-ight now which means that person is a wiener.
A more complete rule is:
"i" before "e" except
- after "c",
- in words where it sounds like long "a", or
- in words that are weird or foreign,
- and scientific words often do not follow the rules.
"i" goes before "e" in words like the following: believe, chief, field, niece, relief, sieve, and yield.
Some exceptions containing the long "a" are the usually-noted neighbor and weigh. Some more are: freight, vein, veil, geisha, sheik, and dreidel. The last three fall under the "foreign" clause even if you like to pronounce them with a long "e" sound.
The word weird is weird. 'nuff said.
The word foreign is, well, foreign. So are recent arrivals to the language, such as leisure and its ilk, from French*, and sheila, an Aussie slang word for "girl".
The word science doesn't follow the original "except after-c" rule. And caffeine, codeine, protein, and other words with the "-eine" or "-ein" ending and a long "e" sound are other scientific exceptions in the other direction.
* TheFreeDictionary notes that leisure comes from Middle English, from Norman French leisour, from Old French leisir meaning "to be permitted", from Latin licre. In terms of language, this is recent. At least, it is recent enough that the spelling has not changed to match the rule. Of course, you might be rightfully getting the impression that this rule is not much of a rule, given the hefty list of exceptions.
But then again, this is the English language. 'nuff said.
They require I use i before e in a sentence to enter this information.
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