Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

She smelt of spoilt T-forms

created by mcd

(thing) by mcd (1.6 wk) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Mon Jan 15 2007 at 6:58:15

Noders are generally confident in their knowledge of the English language - even down to the minutiae - but in deference to non-conformists everywhere, this noder shall admit to ignorance.

It has happened before. It will happen again.

Churning through an old Ursula K. Le Guin novel, I am assaulted again and again by a minor irritation, until my conscious mind spots it: "Dreamed! Isn't it supposed to be dreamt!?" As it turns out, both are actually correct and thus I was impelled to find out why.

Dreamed and dreamt are different in their representation of the past-tense form of dream much for the same reason that flavor is spelled differently than flavour. Newton's 3.14 Law of Physics states that there must be tiny differences in languages spoken on different land-masses simply to make grammar and spelling bees that much more difficult. A'ight, alright - it is simply a difference between American and British English.

Dreamed is the American past-simple form of dream, while dreamt is the British, sometimes referred to as the "irregular" or T-form. Please note that British is used as a descriptive to also mean the more traditional English. T-forms seem to be on the decline in both American and British English. Consider some more examples:

Burn   burnt   burned  
Lean   leant   leaned 
Learn  learnt  learned 
Smell  smelt   smelled 
Spell  spelt   spelled 
Spill  spilt   spilled 
Spoil  spoilt  spoiled 

Notice that these are T-forms in which the vowel being sounded does not change. There are also some T-forms in which the vowel sound does change that are still quite common (crept, dealt, dreamt, felt, leapt, meant). The fact that dreamt is in that list explains why, even as an American, I might still favor (favour?) using dreamt instead of dreamed.

Sweet dreamts! D'oh!! Even as an ESL teacher, I'll never get this language.


src.
http://www.englishpage.com/irregularverbs/info.html
http://esl.about.com/library/weekly/aa110698.htm

printable version
chaos

As it were bated breath Adios Ursula K. Le Guin
What the dickens to say 'yes' to one moment is to say 'yes' to all of eternity anatomically correct Love
Wishbone Ash English American Isaac Newton
A Wizard of Earthsea smelt The Beast P
British Dream Log: January 5, 2006
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
After stirring Everything, these nodes rose to the top:
Imagism
Aztec Empire
A few minutes is all it will take sometimes to completely undo me
Hiraeth
negative nodevertising
Gerald Ford
Ferdinand Marcos
ApoxyButt's Guide to Successful Boating
The one my father never met
Eduard Wiiralt
Lawrence Textile Strike
Hitler as a great man
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
New Writeups
octillion369
Frost wyrm(person)
kalen
Three "T"s(idea)
octillion369
Undead(idea)
archiewood
Ico(fiction)
Heisenberg
Why I love Everything2(log)
octillion369
Death Knight(person)
XWiz
Are you hoping for a miracle?(review)
santo
The Host(review)
LostPsion
"Shut the Fuck Up" Theaters(idea)
beatrice
You've been slowly taking me over for nearly a year, do you know that?(idea)
Berek
YouTube(thing)
shaogo
How to Pretend to Have a Job(idea)
hapax
Les Provinciales(review)
zoeb
The Scene(review)
aneurin
Telephone Numbers for drama purposes(idea)
This page courtesy of The Everything Development Company