Annoying?

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Smelled ... Smelt

Spelled ... Spelt

I've been brought up to use option two. Is "ed" an American rule or something? Or am I just using a different version altogether?

~Ben




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Is the "t" UK? Because that's what I use, so I hope it is :)




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Thank you for bringing this up, because this really confuses me!

I used to use the second rule, but I've been told that the "ed" version is better. Yet when I listen to everyone else around me using the "t" ending, I get so confused!

How does this work??

~~~

EDIT: Oh, so it's UK? That's great. Now I can stop pulling my hair out! Thanks people!
Your = Possession. Your shoes are so sweet!
You're = Omission. You're quite strange...

If you are confused about which to put, simply say in your mind "you are" and see if that fits the sentence. If not, you are looking for your.

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You're welcome, fellow Brits! :P




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Eh? I heard this was from strong and weak verbs. Strong verbs change the vowel, while weak verbs add an ending.
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Rosey Unicorn wrote:Eh? I heard this was from strong and weak verbs. Strong verbs change the vowel, while weak verbs add an ending.


I'm not quite following you. What vowel change? What's a strong or a weak verb in this context?




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I meant in the conjugation of some verbs, the vowel changes. In the conjugation of others, no vowel changes.

Swim, swam, swum= a strong verb being conjugated. The vowel changed to change the tense.

Love, loved= a weak verb being conjugated. The ending changed to change the tense.

I'm probably confusing everybody more. :P
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Ink is blood. Paper is bandages. The wounded press books to their heart to know they're not alone.




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AH no, I get what you mean, but I'm not sure if it applies to smelt O.o




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Rosey Unicorn wrote:I meant in the conjugation of some verbs, the vowel changes. In the conjugation of others, no vowel changes.


:D Hey! I know what you're talking about.

Yay for "Brit vs U.S." spelling confusion!
I am reminded of the babe by you.




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"ed" is American (im American so u can always ask me!) and "t" is British. i never write "t" only "ed".
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