Further help
Still confused? Other niggling questions about English? Contact us.
Buy further English grammar and spelling tips
Future Perfect sells notes, as Adobe PDF documents, which clearly explain common writing issues and their solutions. These are low-cost learning tools which can be purchased individually, in groups or as the whole collection.
English grammar and communications hints and tips
Is it handicapped or handicaped
When adding -ing and -ed to verbs, we sometimes double the consonant beforehand. People are often confused with ‘handicapped/handicaped’, ‘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’).
Verbs ending in ‘p’
Most verbs ending in ‘p’, after an unstressed vowel, have no doubling of that final consonant in standard received British English or American English.
Here are some which follow the ‘most verbs’ rule: ‘develop’, ‘gossip’, ‘gallop’ – these become just ‘developing/developed’, ‘gossiping/gossiped’, ‘galloping/galloped’.
Even here, there are pesky exceptions: ‘worship’, ‘handicap’ and ‘kidnap’ become ‘worshipping/worshipped’, ‘handicapping/handicapped’ and ‘kidnapping/kidnapped’ in standard received British English.
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.
See other tips
- Is it benefitted or benefited?
- Is it dialled or dialed?
- Is it focussed or focused?
- Is it kidnapped or kidnaped?
- Is it targetted or targeted?
- Is it travelled or traveled?
- Is it unparallelled or unparalleled?
- Is it worshipped or worshiped?
Remember, whenever you have those niggling queries going around the office (like ‘where to put this apostrophe’, ‘do we use that or which; dispatch or despatch; complimentary or complementary; practise or practice’), do just simply drop us an e-mail or call.
See further English grammar hints and tips
