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Anonymous Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

'Propulsively' - a word? Why/Why not?

0 'Propulsive' the adjective is in the dictionary. However 'propulsively' the adverb is not. It also shows up in spell checks as a misspelling. I can not find this word in any dictionary anywhere. However adverbs such as 'compulsively' are listed.02br
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00What grammar rule would determine whether or not 'propulsively' is an actual word? If it is an actual word, why would it not be listed in any dictionaries along side adverbs such as 'compulsively'? Is it acceptable to just add 'ly' to an adjective and its magically an adverb...in the dictionary or not?02br
00 Propulsively confused,02br
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00- Steve 0-
  

Top answer

0Yeah, it seems it's not a word... how curious, lol. 05002br 00But I can imagine engineers, physicists, mathematicians, technicians, nerds and geeks using that word if necessary.

  • 0Yeah, it seems it's not a word...
  • how curious, lol.
  • 05002br 00But I can imagine engineers, physicists, mathematicians, technicians, nerds and geeks using that word if necessary.
  • I know those kinds of people have no problems making up new words to say what they want, as long as they make sense theoretically.
  • 010id1
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12 Answers
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0Yeah, it seems it's not a word... how curious, lol. 05002br
00But I can imagine engineers, physicists, mathematicians, technicians, nerds and geeks using that word if necessary. I know those kinds of people have no problems making up new words to say what they want, as long as they make sense theoretically. 010id1
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0 I think you can use it0-
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0 So, I spoke to an english professor last night and I was told...02br
00 A verb can not be described as 'propulsive', therefore it is not an adverb. "The bat propulsively affected the ball" is incorrect. However, "The effect of the bat was propulsive" is correct. When you say "Propulsively affected" you are actually trying to describe the EFFECT of the verb and not the verb itsel
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0 Listen, I could care less what someone says or if it's in the dictionary, it is already used by 01b00highly-educated native-speaking02b00 experts in the field, in 01b00books. Check Google Books: 02br
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01b0044302b00 on 01b00propulsively02b02br
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00This says tha
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0That's understood. You can use it if you want. I'm asking about it in the context of grammar and it is grammatically incorrect. I'm sure you could do a google search and find tons of books where highly educated native speaking experts end their sentences with prepositions. How many books contain a sentence like . . "that's what she needed to go to the store for."? Countless. It's fine.
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01cite10Anonymous12cite10I'm sure you could do a google search and find tons of books where highly educated native speaking experts end their sentences with prepositions. How many books contain a sentence like . . "that's what she needed to go to the store for."? Countless. It's fine. You can say it. But that sentence is not grammatically
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01cite10Anonymous12cite10People say and type it all the time. But, it is absolutely not grammatically correct.12blockquote
10What people say all the time is automatically and by definition part of a certain variety and register of English, and it's grammatical according to the grammar of that kind of English. Since preposit
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0 Well, since you are the grammar geek then I have no option but to accept your answer. I have no rebuttal other than, "that's not what I was taught my whole life". I went to private schools and was taught, I guess, classic grammar. So, needless to say, I would basically be hit with a ruler if I ended a sentence with a preposition or if I used an adverb incorrectly. 0-
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0How fortunate that your whole life isn't over yet, so you can keep learning. I learn stuff here all the time. I'm wrong often enough, but not about this one.02br
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00Don't feel too bad. People who'd be taught their whole lives that Earth was the center of the universe suffered worse fates than a rule for suggesting otherwise.02br
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00(I don't take q
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0 Anon: 02br
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00You may want read some of the feedback gathered on this issue 01b00in another forum02b00, where I posted the core of your opinions. I think I did it in an unbiased form, but ... 02br
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01b00'Propulsively' - a word?02b02br
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