Page 1 of What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
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What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
. . . . . .contra???
(I`m kind of referring to the spelling of the past tense here TBH - assuming that saying it in the past is genuinely allowable under English language law)
EDIT : contra`d perhaps??
YNWA
A.C.C
"Clarkson you infantile pillock" - J May, Top Gear, 9/11/2008
This item was edited on Monday, 26th January 2009, 14:32
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
No, it`s a prefix and occasional noun (Contra rebels) not a verb. See here.
EDITED to de-twatify...
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Could someone please
Remove these cutleries
From my knees...
This item was edited on Monday, 26th January 2009, 14:37
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
So when talking in an accounting sense and the client says
"we will contra what we owe them with what they owe us and pay them a cheque for the balance"
If I was to ask him a week later he should use a different past tense term to describe the transaction ie "we offset what we owed them . . . . . . "
Just in talking terms verbally you here "contra`d" as in past tense. I just came to write down the explanation given to me and suddenly realised that I woudlnt know how you spell it and then questioned whether it is actually a word
YNWA
A.C.C
"Clarkson you infantile pillock" - J May, Top Gear, 9/11/2008
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
It is an accounting term as well, at lease according to this.
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
So on the past tense of it you would think???
(you would have thought as an auditor / accountant this may have being a topic of conversation in my office sometime earlier in the last 7 and a half years really!!!)
YNWA
A.C.C
"Clarkson you infantile pillock" - J May, Top Gear, 9/11/2008
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
Quote:
twatify.
Someone phone the OED that definitely needs to go in.
Snaps
Some days it`s just not worth gnawing through the straps
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
In accountancy is it not still a contraction of contra-something?
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Could someone please
Remove these cutleries
From my knees...
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
You wouldn`t write contra`d either though, would you?
Surely the apostrophe is used to indicate missing letters.
But there aren`t any.
So it would be contrad. :/
RE: What is the past tense of the word. . . . . . .
Bloody accountants.
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Could someone please
Remove these cutleries
From my knees...