Wählen Sie aus verschiedenen Englisch Lehrkräften für ...
Jay
Why is the continuous form of vomit "vomiting", not "vomitting"?
Why is the continuous form of vomit "vomiting", not "vomitting"? We usually put one more consonant when the word ends with one short vowel and consonant. For example, stop - stopping, run - running, swim - swimming, get - getting, sit - sitting.
Could anyone explain about this?
1. Okt. 2018 16:00
Antworten · 3
1
The rule applies to words consisting of one syllable (such as your examples) and longer words where the stress is on the last syllable.
Thus we double the final consonants in verbs such as 'forget' and 'transfer', because the second syllable of these words is stressed. With 'vomit', however, the stress is on the first syllable, so we don't double the 't'.
Compare 'vomit' (stress Xx) with the word 'permit' (stress xX), for example. We write 'permitting' and 'permitted' to emphasise the stress on the second syllable, but write 'vomiting' and 'vomited' to show that the stress is on the first.
I hope that makes sense.
1. Oktober 2018
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!
Jay
Sprachfähigkeiten
Englisch, Koreanisch
Lernsprache
Englisch
Artikel, die Ihnen gefallen könnten

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 positive Bewertungen · 8 Kommentare

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
30 positive Bewertungen · 8 Kommentare

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 positive Bewertungen · 12 Kommentare
Weitere Artikel
