I just finished a board and counted the number of words I entered that were rejected. There were more than ten. They were all of the same pattern: words that ended in "ing" for which the plural was rejected. So, "blusterings" was okay, but "blisterings" was not. "Buttering" was fine, but "butterings" was not. For heaven's sake, "bittering" was counted, and "bitterings" was not. I've mentioned this before, but let me say it again: a GERUND is a noun. Noun plurals are formed by adding an "s". AL.WAYS. If it's not in the dictionary, it ought to be. This is elementary English grammar. In fact, I'm struggling to find any example of any English word ending in "ing" for which the ending "ings" is not valid. I'm sure Lalatan could come up with one, or Spike, if one actually exists.
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Originally posted by bwt1213 View PostI just finished a board and counted the number of words I entered that were rejected. There were more than ten. They were all of the same pattern: words that ended in "ing" for which the plural was rejected. So, "blusterings" was okay, but "blisterings" was not. "Buttering" was fine, but "butterings" was not. For heaven's sake, "bittering" was counted, and "bitterings" was not. I've mentioned this before, but let me say it again: a GERUND is a noun. Noun plurals are formed by adding an "s". AL.WAYS. If it's not in the dictionary, it ought to be. This is elementary English grammar. In fact, I'm struggling to find any example of any English word ending in "ing" for which the ending "ings" is not valid. I'm sure Lalatan could come up with one, or Spike, if one actually exists.
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The only way any word ending in "ing" does not take "s" for an ending is if the word is not a noun or verb. So, "annoying" doesn't take an "s". "Nothing" doesn't, either (despite the song "Sweet Nothings"). On the other hand, there are words that are used in multiple ways and aren't always an adverb or adjective and so DO take an "s" plural: "boring", "piping", and "running", for example. But every single gerund in existence IS a noun and has an "s" plural.
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I've also always thought that pluralizing gerunds should be kosher. Then again, many dictionaries are put together based on real-world usage rather than perfectly logical rules. (I have an old official Hasbro computer version of Boggle, and it seems pretty random whether these plurals work or not. I waste lot of time trying them anyway.) I'd be on the side of counting them, but upping the rarity. (Given how I play, I admit that would be a little self serving though.)
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Originally posted by bwt1213 View PostI've mentioned this before, but let me say it again: a GERUND is a noun. Noun plurals are formed by adding an "s". AL.WAYS. If it's not in the dictionary, it ought to be. This is elementary English grammar. In fact, I'm struggling to find any example of any English word ending in "ing" for which the ending "ings" is not valid. I'm sure Lalatan could come up with one, or Spike, if one actually exists.Last edited by lalatan; 03-23-2021, 02:13 PM.
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Originally posted by DonGuy47 View PostI'm not clear on the details, but the issue is that not every verb-ing can be a gerund (noun). Some of them are only adjectives or verbs. I think "radiating" is an example of a verb-ing that is never a noun.
For the words I mentioned earlier as having been rejected, words like "butterings" distress me most, because it's trivial to construct a sentence using it, and every native English speaker (and, I'll bet many non-native speakers as well) will immediately understand what it means and accept it as a perfectly legitimate word with no plausible alternative. I would offer: "I can butter my toast with butter from the refrigerator, with butter warm and soft from the table, or with melted butter from the stove. Of all these butterings, I prefer the melted butter." The only difficulty here is that "butter" can be either a noun or a verb, and only the verb could be used to construct the gerund. Likewise, blisterings is easily understood -- but blister can be either a noun or a verb, just like butter. Maybe there's a pattern here, but I can't say I like it. It's not logical.
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I'll add my two cents and agree that it's pretty frustrating and time consuming when some "ing" endings take an "s" and some don't. Since they don't come up that often it's hard to memorize all instances when a "s" will be accepted, even if it makes sense in my mind that it should work. So in the end I'll go over it twice and lose time that I could get other words....
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