When adding -ing and -ed to verbs, we sometimes double the consonant beforehand. People are often confused with ‘dialled/dialed’, ‘benefitted/benefited’, ‘focussed/focused’ and ‘targetted/targeted’. This tip answers some of those queries.
The official requirements are that we
‘double a single consonant letter at the end of any base where the preceding
vowel is spelled with a single letter and stressed’.
What does this mean in practice?
Examples:
word
|
present
participle
|
past
participle
|
bar
|
barring
|
barred
|
beg
|
begging
|
begged
|
occur
|
occurring
|
occurred
|
permit
|
permitting
|
permitted
|
patrol
|
patrolling
|
patrolled
|
It is true to say that there is usually
no doubling when the preceding vowel is unstressed (‘enter’ becomes
‘entering/entered’; ‘visit’ becomes ‘visiting/visited’) or when the preceding
vowel is written with two letters (‘tread’ becomes ‘treading/treaded’).
Dial
With ‘dial’, even though the preceding
vowel is written with two letters (so you would think that there would be no
doubling), it becomes ‘dialling/dialled’ (though not in American English, as
mentioned).
Some words change their spelling to
cope (they add a letter ‘k’).
word
|
present
participle
|
past
participle
|
panic
|
panicking
|
panicked
|
traffic
|
trafficking
|
trafficked
|
frolic
|
frolicking
|
frolicked
|
bivouac
|
bivouacking
|
bivouacked
|
What
about ‘focus’?
This word can take either double or
single s, with the single option being highly preferred.
word
|
present
participle
|
past
participle
|
focus
|
focusing/focussing
|
focused/focussed
|
Here’s
an odd one to end:
American
|
British
English
|
parallel
|
parallel
|
paralleling
|
parallelling
|
paralleled
|
parallelled
|
Example:
The vetting service from Future Perfect
is unparallelled.
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