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  2. Winged or Wingèd? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/246228

    Then there are words that can be pronounced either way, such as wingid/wingd, according to the Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). Note that, when winged means "shot in the wing", it is always pronounced wingd, according to the same dictionary. Share. Improve this answer. Follow.

  3. Past tense of "to wing"? - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/18355

    3. Not much doubt on that one at the present time. But winged is under pressure from many other words (clung, flung, rung, stung, etc.), so I expect wung has occured repeatedly in the past - facetiously and or through genuine ignorance. It may even become the standard form eventually.

  4. What does Homer mean when he says, "her words had wings"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/65808

    Incidentally, the expression “winged words” has come to mean a phrase that started as a quote but then took a life of its own. The very coining of this usage by Georg Büchmann made “winged words” winged words. ¹ F. M. Combellack, Words that Die. The Classical Journal, 1950. ² M. Parry, About Winged Words. The Classical Journal, 1937.

  5. When is "marked" pronounced with 2 syllables?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/52242

    5. Marked only has two syllables in poetic or archaic usage. Aged has two syllables when used as a noun (some of the aged need motorised shopping trolleys), or as a "standalone" adjective (an aged relative). It's only one syllable when used as part of a compound adjective (middle-aged relative), or as a verb (I've aged a year since then).

  6. What does the grave accent mark on words mean?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/35347/what-does-the...

    Wikipedia says it at least as well as I could have:. The grave accent, although not standardly applied to any English words, is sometimes used in poetry and song lyrics to indicate that a vowel usually silent is to be pronounced, in order to fit the rhythm or meter.

  7. tenses - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/4855

    To add to Martha's answer:. The simple past ("Did you see this") refers about an event in the past; The present perfect ("Have you seen this") suggests a link with the present time.

  8. These phrases are all correct. "Have" cannot apply: it is used when the past is "attached" to this time. In other words, it is not a question of how far back something happened. It is just a question of how you describe it; meaning up to this moment or with a period in between, which detaches that past from this time. Therefore:

  9. tenses - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/290859/what-the...

    Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  10. I found online only mentions of it being used as an intransitive verb. 1. See the following intransitive example: When your future is hinging upon the results of a courtroom trial, this is an example of a time when your future will pend on the trial. 2. But I did not turn up any evidence of it being used as a transitive verb.

  11. literature - Dickens: meaning of “preserves” in “preserves of...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/171754/dickens-meaning...

    It is also worth noting that Carlyle – whose history of The French Revolution was one of Dickens’ chief historical sources – associates the first flight of the French nobles at the stirrings of Revolution with the flight of their game: “On the Cliffs of Dover, over all the Marches of France, there appear, this autumn, two signs on the ...