I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest Harry Potter book in which J.K. Rowling used "span" instead of the more usual "spun" as the past tense of "spin". The US view is in accordance with their 1828 Webster dictionary: span is not used. The British reactions were much more mixed. See the following comments from the same thread: "I've never heard or seen (span as the past of spin) used in Britain"
"To my ear, "The car span out of control" sounds much better than the same with "spun"." Question one. Why do some Britons deny that they've encountered "span" while others prefer to use it? Is there a north-south divide with "span" being used more in the north, less in the south?
Question two. What's special about "span out of control"? In Web searches, this phrase did appear more often than I expected relative to the same with "spun". I carried out a word frequency survey on UK webpages and found that the overall frequency was: 8% span, 92% spun (excluding past participles e.g. the story was spun) However, the frequency for span/spun out of control came out as 22% span, 78% spun The difference seems too large to be dismissed as a statistical fluke.
Top answer
K. Rowling used "span" instead ... dictionary: span is not used.
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K.
Rowling used "span" instead ...
dictionary: span is not used.
The British reactions were much more mixed.
See the following comments from the same thread:[/nq] When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman?
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David Picton typed thus: [nq:1]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest Harry Potter book in which J.K. Rowling used "span" instead ... dictionary: span is not used. The British reactions were much more mixed. See the following comments from the same thread:[/nq] When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman? This is a reasonably well-known mediaeval v
[nq:1]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest Harry Potter book in which J.K. Rowling used "span" instead of the more usual "spun" as the past tense of "spin".[/nq] (Snip) [nq:1]Question one. Why do some Britons deny that they've encountered "span" while others prefer to use it? Is there a north-south divide with "span" being used more in the north, less in the south?[/
[nq:1]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest Harry Potter book in which J.K. Rowling used "span" instead ... dictionary: span is not used. The British reactions were much more mixed. See the following comments from the same thread:[/nq]
[nq:1]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest Harry Potter book in which J.K. Rowling used "span" instead ... view is in accordance with their 1828 Webster dictionary: span is not used. The British reactions were much more mixed.[/nq] Compare with "ring", "rang" and "rung" for the present, past and past particple of the verb "to ring". I think you will find there is a tende
[nq:2]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest ... the more usual "spun" as the past tense of "spin".[/nq] (snip) [nq:2] "To my ear, "The car span out of control" sounds much better than the same with "spun"."[/nq] (snip) [nq:2]Question two. What's special about "span out of control"? In ... often than I expected relative to the same with "spun".(snip)[/nq]
At 09:40:31 on Mon, 5 Apr 2004, Matthew Huntbach (Email Removed) wrote in : [nq:2]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest ... the more usual "spun" as the past tense of "spin".[/nq] [nq:1]Compare with "ring", "rang" and "rung" for the present, past and past particple of the verb "to ring". I think you will find there is a tendency these days for "rung" to be used as the
[nq:2]I've been reading with interest the reactions to the latest ... is not used. The British reactions were much more mixed.[/nq] [nq:1]Compare with "ring", "rang" and "rung" for the present, past and past particple of the verb "to ring". I think ... to merge, particularly in irregular verbs that aren't used often enough for people to become sure of the correct form.[/nq] This is not a n
(snip) [nq:2]Compare with "ring", "rang" and "rung" for the present, past ... enough for people to become sure of the correct form.[/nq] [nq:1]However, there have also been movements in the other direction - towards the distinct forms. This post demonstrates this very clearly:[/nq] Sorry - that's the wrong post. The reference should be a little further down the thread:
[nq:1](snip) Now we have the situation where the -u- form is often used in speech e.g. I swum, but educated people know that this should be corrected to the -a- form (I swam) in standard English.[/nq] I have now carried out a UK website survey which bears out this point. For swam vs swum as the past tense: 99% swam, 1% swum! This proves that there is still a strong preference for the -a- form