Sky Cutter 294 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 (edited) which sounds like it should be past tense of snowing? snowed or snew? and any other words you think are wrong? like stupider? personally i think it should be snew instead of snowed Edited May 11, 2014 by Sky Cutter 1 Avatar by Jokuc ~ Signature by me ~ (Try it) War Thunder ID: ColonelWaffle studying to be a pilot! ~ I like planes (B-17 FTW) ~ What's-its-face window "Never accept the sky as the limit, we got to the moon and beyond." - some guy with an unhealthy obsession of planes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
_Kurtis 636 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Since "snow" is a regular verb, the past tense should be "snowed". 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karma Lightwing 245 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 im pretty sure its snowed. But personally if I can avoid that emphasis i will do it. Also due to my way of saying thing in Norway i usually put it out like "oh wow its frosty/white on the ground, the snow really must have been falling last night." And if i have to use it i will say it like "oh it looks like it snowed last night, it must have been cold" Silly muffins, of course i have to eat you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moonlight Magician 494 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Snowed! Snew doesn't sound like a word! it just sounds weird! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scootalove 10,689 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 I think the correct 'past tense' word to use is, snowed. Credit: Moony © Forum FAQ Forum Rules Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karma Lightwing 245 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 According to the internet Snew is a dialect version of the word snowed. Well that would make sense, but i doubt it would ever be accepted as a correct way of saying snow in a past tense. 1 Silly muffins, of course i have to eat you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adorkable 2,737 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 I don't think "snew" is an actual word. Obviously, it snowed last night. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Frith is Magick 1,471 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 (edited) It's "snowed". Think of it this way: if the past tense of snow is snew, then the past tense of flow should be flew. Then again, that assumes consistency in English. but it's going to blow up; it blew up it's going to grow, it grew Exactly what I meant about consistency. Why isn't the past tense of flow flew? It seems rather arbitrary, but hey, English. Edited May 11, 2014 by Frith is Magick Keep flyin' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sky Cutter 294 May 11, 2014 Author Share May 11, 2014 but it's going to blow up; it blew up it's going to grow, it grew i know, i knew 1 Avatar by Jokuc ~ Signature by me ~ (Try it) War Thunder ID: ColonelWaffle studying to be a pilot! ~ I like planes (B-17 FTW) ~ What's-its-face window "Never accept the sky as the limit, we got to the moon and beyond." - some guy with an unhealthy obsession of planes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
crazitaco 596 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Snew? Maybe you should rethink that word *Click the picture to join the Nega-Bronies!* "Every cloud has a silver lining" *except for the mushroom-shaped ones which have a lining of Caesium-127, Strontium-90 and other radioactive isotopes. My OC: http://mlpforums.com/page/roleplay-characters/_/krazie-taco-r3366 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GenderIsAnIllusion 2,177 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Snew sounds like something I might need a tissue for..... 1 My peep is against bullying.... Are you? http://mlpforums.com/topic/117034-suggestion-anti-bullying-campaign/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oblivion 20,266 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Bro, I have never heard anyone say "snew" before, perhaps I should start doing it just to be different! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kel_Grym 1,917 May 11, 2014 Share May 11, 2014 Language is a thing that changes over time. A couple hundred years from now "snew" may very well be the accepted past tense of snow. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arctic Night 884 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 "It snewed the night that last came." Sig made by Kyoshi. Cool things people have said about me: Never heard of him but I guess just you mentioning him is a good reason not to go anywhere near that name. (In reference to an author I suggested.) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Camouflage 26 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 I've got enough problems with my own English, although I've probably used the word snew before. I have such bad slang sometimes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flutter's lover <3 8,205 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 "snew" reminds me too much of that episode of Futurama, with the phrase "Death by Snu snu"that one of the Amazonian women said. It's snow, but it's going to blow up; it blew up it's going to grow, it grew i know, i knew Just like "It's going to rain. It has rained" "Rain and "snow" are nouns, whereas "grew" and "knew" are not. I think because they're nouns, it's different. 1 Fluttershy's lover, she's my waifu. I'm in love and obsessed with her, she's given me shyabetes. *Hnnnng* Yellow Pink Squee Blogs | Ask one of Fluttershy's biggest fans | Official Fluttershy fanclub page! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yellow Diamond 7,569 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 The past tense of the verb "snow" is most definitely "snowed". 1 Domine, tu omnia nosti, tu scis quia amo te. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callisto 1,877 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 (edited) "Snew" is not a word, and even if it was, it would still sound really dumb. Snowed is the correct word. Edited May 12, 2014 by Callisto Y'know, I've been on this site for almost ten years and I've never had a proper signature. Ain't that something? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Barbaloot 198 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 but it's going to blow up; it blew up it's going to grow, it grew i know, i knew It might be because the word Snow comes from a different origin than the rest of these words, resulting in different grammatical rules. This is very common considering English is essentially a mish-mash of various languages and grammar. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SasQ 1,376 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 (edited) I don't think "snew" is an actual word. snow (v.) c.1300, from the noun, replacing Old English sniwan, which would have yielded modern snew (which existed as a parallel form until 17c. and, in Yorkshire, even later), from the root of snow (n.). The Old English verb is cognate with Middle Dutch sneuuwen, Dutch sneeuwen, Old Norse snjova, Swedish snöga. Also þikke as snow þat snew, Or al so hail þat stormes blew. [Robert Mannyng of Brunne, transl. Wace's "Chronicle," c.1330] Source: http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=snew Also see here in Wiktionary. So it seems that it once was an actual word, and it was conjugated as such. But in modern Enghlish it was replaced by the regular conjugation, perhaps from the very same reason all such "modern" forms come from: most people don't respect orthography and grammar rules and don't understand them. I see it all the time all over the world. See how many YouTube comments are there where one says "I am not aloud to use it" instead of "I am not allowed to use it", or confusing "too" with "to". I guess when enough people will make such errors, they become "official" forms of these words, too. Edited May 12, 2014 by SasQ 1 My best posts list Recent post: Language Exchange Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adorkable 2,737 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 snow (v.) c.1300, from the noun, replacing Old English sniwan, which would have yielded modern snew (which existed as a parallel form until 17c. and, in Yorkshire, even later), from the root of snow (n.). The Old English verb is cognate with Middle Dutch sneuuwen, Dutch sneeuwen, Old Norse snjova, Swedish snöga. Also þikke as snow þat snew, Or al so hail þat stormes blew. [Robert Mannyng of Brunne, transl. Wace's "Chronicle," c.1330] Source: http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=snew Also see here in Wiktionary. Haha, okay okay, you got me. ^^ But I can honestly say I've never heard the word until now, so I have you to thank for adding another word to my vocabulary! ^^ However, I still don't think it's "snew". ^^" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SasQ 1,376 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 No offense, I wasn't trying to "catch" you, not even particularly you I think I've seen the "snew" version before somewhere, in some British (Scottish?) English book or poem. I can't remember now. But I'm sure I did. This is an obsolete form (but still valid in some regions of UK I guess), similar to these Old-English "thou", "thee", "hath", "fix'd" etc., used only occasionally for stylistic/poetic effects. My best posts list Recent post: Language Exchange Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Justin_Case001 4,885 May 12, 2014 Share May 12, 2014 If the past tense of snow was snew, then the past tense of flow would be flew. But flew is the past tense of fly. So that means that snew must be the past tense of sny, which isn't a word. So I guess that wraps everything up in a neat little package. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oblivion 20,266 December 30, 2019 Share December 30, 2019 I have literally never even heard the term "snew" or maybe I have??? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Here No Longer 5,276 December 30, 2019 Share December 30, 2019 "snew" lol That's not a word... 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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