AutumnLeaf
Member
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2013
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Chinese
- Home Country
- China
- Current Location
- China
Greetings, teachers!
I’d like to know: wedded or wed, which one do you usually choose to use as the past participle of the verb wed?
I did an online search, and found a lot of wedded. Here are two examples:
Wedded at last, Oldfield and his new wife waved goodbye.
The man, who is wedded to Truth and worships Truth alone, proves unfaithful to her, if he applies his talents to anything else.
And also a lot of wed. Examples:
On 23 September 1945, at the same church in which she had wed six years earlier, Doris married Lionel Ingram.
She would have liked to have wed a Jewish boy, primarily for mother's sake, but fate had decreed otherwise.
I’d like to know: wedded or wed, which one do you usually choose to use as the past participle of the verb wed?
I did an online search, and found a lot of wedded. Here are two examples:
Wedded at last, Oldfield and his new wife waved goodbye.
The man, who is wedded to Truth and worships Truth alone, proves unfaithful to her, if he applies his talents to anything else.
And also a lot of wed. Examples:
On 23 September 1945, at the same church in which she had wed six years earlier, Doris married Lionel Ingram.
She would have liked to have wed a Jewish boy, primarily for mother's sake, but fate had decreed otherwise.