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iée

iée is a short, three-character string consisting of the Latin letters i, é, and e. It is not established as a word in any natural language and has no widely accepted meaning in linguistic corpora.

Within typography and computational linguistics, iée is sometimes used as an illustrative example to discuss how

Pronunciation and lexical status are context-dependent; as a nonword string, iée does not have a canonical pronunciation.

Because it is not a term with established usage, iée appears mainly in theoretical discussions, typography

diacritics
interact
with
base
letters.
It
highlights
encoding
choices,
such
as
representing
é
as
a
single
code
point
U+00E9
or
as
a
combination
of
e
(U+0065)
with
the
combining
acute
accent
(U+0301),
and
how
these
choices
affect
normalization
and
search.
In
hypothetical
analyses,
it
would
be
treated
as
a
sequence
of
three
letters
with
an
accented
vowel
in
the
middle.
exercises,
and
Unicode-themed
examples.
See
also
Unicode
normalization,
diacritics,
Latin
script,
and
orthography.