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  • I panicked or I was panicked? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I want to refer to a situation that happened months ago So what should I use? "I panicked" or "I was panicked"?
  • Why is k added to panic when suffixes added (as in panicky)?
    Examples: panicked, panicking, panicky Why is this the case? Are there any other English words that do the same? I'm also curious about any other words that add extra or unexpected letters when part of speech or tense changes The etymology of "panic" includes a Greek origin--"panikon"--which is spelled with a "k" but no "c"
  • pronunciation - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Does that rule also apply to all verbs ending in -ic? Yes There are very few verbs that end with -ic and almost all of them have the letter k in their progressive (-ing form) and participles (-ed form) We add the letter k to their progressives and participles because we want the original pronunciation with the k sound in their inflections And if we don't add the letter k, the
  • How does A hit dog will holler work as a metaphor?
    I spent an evening panicked about how to handle "This dog will hunt" as feedback on a document before he clarified that meant he was happy with it Oddly, the phrases always seemed to involve dogs So, when a politician from Florida recently used the baffling expression "A hit dog will holler" I wasn't surprised
  • 10 days post op, pain in right side - hystersisters. com
    Hysterectomy HysterSisters > Hysterectomy Support Posts > Hysterectomy Recovery (post hysterectomy) 10 days post op, pain in right side User Name
  • History of the phrase The walls are closing in
    There is an interesting and common figurative phrase, the walls are closing in, indicating that someone is trapped, panicked, running out of time, or doomed There is a related question about the
  • Is it more correct to say You have not yet lt;actioned gt; or You have . . .
    Both are completely correct, but "You have not yet *x*ed any items" is considered more formal, so it is significantly less likely to be spoken, as we tend toward informality in speech
  • Origin of Screw the pooch - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    However, the media painted him as a failure, a coward who panicked and blew the hatch in an attack of claustrophobia "The phrase screw the pooch itself was derived from an earlier phrase that was quite familiar to those of us in the service in WW2 I was a Fire Control Computer technician (Fire Controlman) in the US Navy 1944-1946
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    With all their limbs tied down to a bed, what do we call the panicked movement of someone trying to break free somehow? He tried to ____________ out of the bed
  • Focussed or focused? Rules for doubling the last consonant when . . .
    This mainly happens with words ending in unstressed -ic, such as panic > panicked You can see a post about this here (Why is “k” added to “panic” when suffixes added (as in “panicky”)?) and a post about some possible exceptions to that rule here (Relic as a verb: why the spelling relicing, reliced?) Notes





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