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well lets see..

Heights vs. Nolan 0-3
Heights vs. Dent. Ryan 5-11
Heights vs. F. Ridge 8-10??
Heights vs. Crowley 5-6
Heights vs. Weatherford 4-7

The average/above average teams they have beat consist of Colleyville Her., Lewisville, Paschal,Duncanville, and Burleson. Some people may put Southwest as a good baseball team but they play the same competition Heights does. That is about .500... am i right? All the other wins consist of a horrid district and just bad baseball schools. Dont get me wrong I am a heights dad just listing the facts.

OBTW- Against Colleyville Heritage Kelly pitched and I don't care who this kid pitches against he will win.
Last edited by baseballfather33
Well....DTiger, the Internet is a wonderful place.... Smile

Mastering the I Before E Rule (Or Don't Let the C-I-E-N Words Get You Uptight!) by Don McCabe

Although this book is now out of print, it can be found in: It-ss & Tooze, Apostrophes, and the I Before E Rule Made Easy

The "I before E except after C" rule that is so often quoted doesn't work with words such as: vein, science, Einstein, sufficient, neither, weird, plus about two hundred or so more. So why bother with it? The answer is simply, don't bother with half a rule. If you learn the whole rule you will find out that it does work 99.9999% of the time!

This book presents the rule and then very slowly and methodically teaches the meaning of each part. What the author found out when he first taught this rule to junior high students at the Flint Alternative Junior High School is that they really didn't understand the meaning of the word except. So he not only had the students memorize the ENTIRE RULE, but he also developed exercises in which the students had to give the reason for their answers.

Here is the Complete Rule and examples that follow the rule:

Use I before E --------------------------- ie = believe, field, yield, priest, shield
Except after C --------------------------- cei = receive, receipt, conceited, conceive
Or when sounded as "I" as in Einstein ----- "I" ei = Eileen, height, sleight, stein, Einstein
Or "A" as in weigh ------------------------ "A" ei = weigh, weight, neighbor, sleigh, heir, their
Neither, weird, foreign, leisure ------------ "X" ei = either, weirdo, foreigner
Seize, forfeit, and height ----------------- "X" ei = seizure, forfeiture, protein, caffeine, heifer
Are the common exceptions spelled right
But don't let the C-I-E-N words get you uptight! --- cien = cien! =science, efficient, sufficient, conscience, ancient,


Last edited by Panther Dad
PD - Shouldn't you list your qualifications for citing spelling rules? English is a lot like baseball in its subjectivity, and in order to be taken seriously, you must at least have cum laude credentials. Otherwise, copying verbatim from someone else’s work would infringe on your worth as an English moderator.

I've read somewhere on this website that unless you've published a book or written a paper, an opinion is just useless garbage. Personally, I believe that once the excrement is separated, the opinionated written work can be considered useful knowledge.

Truthfully, your post cracked me up.
quote:
Originally posted by collikar:
PD - Shouldn't you list your qualifications for citing spelling rules? English is a lot like baseball in its subjectivity, and in order to be taken seriously, you must at least have cum laude credentials. Otherwise, copying verbatim from someone else’s work would infringe on your worth as an English moderator.

I've read somewhere on this website that unless you've published a book or written a paper, an opinion is just useless garbage. Personally, I believe that once the excrement is separated, the opinionated written work can be considered useful knowledge.

Truthfully, your post cracked me up.
Enough you guys and gals....TOO FUNNY...Collikar...Congrats to the "lefty" stud...His Colleyville fans are soooo...proud!

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