Because the stress is on the second syllable of the base word ending in consonant + vowel + consonant. its what separates the U from the E so it dos'nt make the word sound like (oh-cure-ence)
Write the word in which the consonant was doubled before adding -ing.
It specifies whether the word has a short or long vowel sound. Take "hop" and "hope:" If you didn't double the P in "hop" when adding ed, they would look exactly the same, "hoped." But if you double the P before adding the suffix, you can clearly see that the word is "hopped."
A Gerund is formed by adding -ing to the word. English has different rules about adding -ing. For example, words that end in a vowel or consonant; words that need a consonant doubled first; words ending in y. Examples: Add Adding (no changes before -ing) Abide Abiding (drop the e first) bed bedding (double the consonant)
It is!
True. If a word ends in a consonant, the consonant is usually doubled before an ending is added. If a word ends in e, the final e is dropped if adding ing or ed. English has some strange ways, and then it has some really strange ways.
When you are changing a regular English verb from the present tense to another form, if the verb ends in a consonant, you sometimes add a second consonant of the same type before you add the suffix. example:swim>swimmed run>running
This happens because of the general rule concerning not only "-ed," but any suffix beginning with a vowel. The rule states that if the consonant ends either a stressed syllable or a single syllable word, AND the consonant is preceded by a single vowel the final consonant is doubled. Ex: "refer" becomes "referred," but "depart" remains "departed."
You double the final consonant before adding the "ed" suffix if both of the following conditions are met: The word is one syllable The word has a single, short vowel followed by a single consonant at the end (e.g., "run" becomes "running," "swim" becomes "swimming")
When you are changing a regular English verb from the present tense to another form, if the verb ends in a consonant, you sometimes add a second consonant of the same type before you add the suffix. example:swim>swimmed run>running
You change the "y" to an "i" before adding a suffix that doesn't start with "i" if a consonant is before it because people might think that the "y" is saying /y./
No, accept -accepted, accepting. The last consonant is usually doubled in short words, ending in a vowel + one consonant: get -getting, swim - swimming, run -running. There are some examples for two-syllable words as well: commit - committing, admit -admitting, travel -travelling. etc.
When adding "-ing" to a word ending in a consonant-vowel pattern, drop the vowel before adding "-ing". Most of these words will end in "e". Wrong: skateing Right: skating Wrong: takeing Right: taking Wrong: relateing Right: relating