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  • suffixes - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    There are about ten times as many words ending in -ence than in -ense, so there's one simple rule of thumb to distinguish them: When in doubt, go with -ence But is there any sort of rule besides memorize the exceptions that captures these -ense words more clearly?
  • orthography - Is there a rule for “‑ance” vs. “‑ence”? - English . . .
    Yes, this is for real No, there really is no rule There used to be a rule in Latin, though Etymonline explains in more detail: -ance suffix attached to verbs to form abstract nouns of process or fact (convergence from converge), or of state or quality (absence from absent); ultimately from L -antia and -entia, which depended on the vowel in the stem word As Old French evolved from Latin
  • Which is correct: troubleshooted or troubleshot?
    Troubleshooted is not a word, but troubleshot is Is this really the correct word to use? I always feel like saying: I troubleshooted it vs I troubleshot it For some reason, it just doesn't
  • Which is the correct past tense of spin: span or spun?
    Span is an older strong past tense form of spin — this is the past tense form that existed in the older Germanic ancestors of English In German, for example, the past tense of spinnen is still spann In English, span has mostly fallen out of use in favor of spun for both the past participle and simple past forms This is a form of paradigm leveling It has occurred in other words like sting
  • Meaning of makes no sense - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Are you asking what "makes no sense" means? Or are you asking which of the two examples you provided is a better alternative to "makes no sense"?
  • differences - Lept vs. leapt vs. leaped - English Language . . .
    After reading this discussion, I'd like to know what example sentences distinguish the meaning of the words lept, leapt, and leaped from each other?
  • Is it quit or quitted? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the correct (grammatical) simple past and past participle form of the verb quit? Is it quit or quitted? She quitted her job (She has quitted her job ) She quit her job (She has quit her
  • grammaticality - Can casted be the past tense of cast? - English . . .
    The Oxford English Dictionary records casted as being used as the past tense of cast from the Middle English period to the sixteenth century The latest citation showing its use is dated 1526 If it is making a comeback, I haven’t heard or seen it, but that may be because it is not widespread in contemporary British English The British National Corpus has only one record for casted, and
  • Overrode vs Overridden - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I got into an argument about the sentence "Have you overrode SomeThingamajig?" I thought that "have overrode" is incorrect, and should be "overrode" or "have overridden", or perhaps "did override"
  • verbs - What is the past tense of sync? - English Language Usage . . .
    The past tense is "synced" "Sunk" is the past tense of "sink" which sounds the same but is a completely different word "Synced" appears to have made its way into dictionaries: Merriam-Webster Wiktionary TheFreeDictionary Dictionary com and I am sure many others Edit: As others have pointed out, "synch" and "synched" are acceptable variants





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