Collins Cobuild English Grammar (196 page)

BOOK: Collins Cobuild English Grammar
6.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

With all
-ing
participles, the
ing
is pronounced as a separate syllable:
/
I
ŋ/
.

With verbs whose base form ends with one of the sounds
/f/
,
/k/
,
/p/
,
/s/
,
/ʃ/
, or
/tʃ/
, the
ed
of the past form is pronounced
/t/
. For example,
pressed
is pronounced
/prest/
and
watched
is pronounced
/wɒtʃt/
.

With verbs whose base forms ends with the sound
/d/
or
/t/
, the
ed
of the past form is pronounced
/d/
. For example,
patted
is pronounced
/pæId/
and
faded
is pronounced
/feIdId/
.

With all other verbs, the
ed
of the past form is pronounced
/d/
. For example,
joined
is pronounced
/ʤɔInd/
and
lived
is pronounced
/lIvd/
.

R60
    With most verbs that end in
e
, the
-ing
participle is formed by substituting
ing
for the final
e
. Similarly, you substitute
ed
for the final
e
to form the past form.
dance
dancing
danced
smile
smiling
smiled
fade
fading
faded
R61
    In the case of a few verbs ending in
e
, you just add
ing
in the normal way to form the
-ing
participle. You still substitute
ed
for
e
to form the past.
singe
singeing
singed
agree
agreeing
agreed

Here is a list of these verbs:

age
agree
binge
canoe
disagree
dye
eye
flee
free
glue
knee
queue
referee
see
singe
tiptoe
whinge
R62
    To form the
-ing
participle of a verb that ends in
ie
, you substitute
ying
for
ie
.
tie
tying

Other books

The Woman in the Wall by Patrice Kindl
How to Make Love to a Woman by Xaviera Hollander
Lord God Made Them All by James Herriot
Mr Forster's Fortune by Church, Lizzie
On Becoming Her Sir by Cassandre Dayne
Fire on Dark Water by Perriman, Wendy
The Headmasters Papers by Richard A. Hawley