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  • Speeded vs. Sped - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The past participles (and past tenses) "speeded" and "sped" are used in different grammatical situations When "speed" is an intransitive verb, the past tense is almost invariably "sped"
  • Is the correct usage to say speed passed or speed past
    I will speed past the cop 'will speed' - is the verb phrase 'past' - is an adverb meaning - 'to pass from one side to another' How will you speed? quickly? slowly? or past? 'to pass-passed' is a verb You have finished the verb phrase with 'speed' The next item is an adverb 'past' (adverb, adjective, preposition) and 'passed' (past tense of to pass) are two words that are often mistaken
  • phrasal verbs - How would you describe a car kicking up clouds of dust . . .
    In English, we tend to relate to the cause of something (cause and effect) Hence your car kicking up clouds of dust But this is not the only way to describe the scene We can also use (effect and implied cause) A cloud of dust hung above a distant road, as a the black car sped towards the city
  • While followed by simple past past continuous
    Use of the simple past does not preclude an extended action state, or there wouldn't be a simple past tense of say 'wait' He waited while I combed my hair He stayed there for several months The past continuous is used when there is a more punctive occurrence during that process: He saw a mouse as he was waiting while I was combing my hair While he was staying there for several months, he
  • Why has the plague on our houses become a pox?
    I am sped:——Is he gone and hath nothing?" That first instance ("a plague on both the houses") remained unchanged from the first folio in the 1623 edition, while the two subsequent instances of "A pox o' both your houses" became "A plague o' both your houses " Excellent observation, Richard Lesh! +1
  • word choice - What types of sounds do cars make? - English Language . . .
    Modern cars aren't supposed to make much noise at all There's the comfort of travellers and the general public near the highway to consider, not to mention the fact that fuel economy implies aerodynamic body shape At most, what we're looking for is something like "muted hum"
  • Is it grammatically correct to say at speed or at altitude?
    It goes back to Old and Middle English, for instance "wið sped" ("with speed", i e quickly, in a c 1250 translation of the Bible) "At altitude" is more recent, but "altitude" as referring to an extremely high state goes back to Early Modern English (OED): "High degree or eminence of any quality or attribute; high rank or position on a scale
  • 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?
  • etymology - What is the origin of many a [singular noun]? And is it . . .
    It's not just "many a" Walt Whitman: Many the burials, many the days and nights, passing away, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: Many the souls that sped, Many the hearts that bled, By our stern orders





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