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A glown poem

A glown poem  
Michael Mendelsohn
 Re: A glown poem  
Adrian Bailey
From:Michael Mendelsohn
Subject:A glown poem
Date:Sat, 22 Jan 2005 11:24:51 +0100
Verbs ending in -ow always have a past particple ending in -owed
(e.g. flow, has flowed). Some also have a PP ending in -own, although
teh only one I can think of is sow.

Earlier today, I tried to piece together a poem that illustrated the
wrong past participle. Can anyone improve on it?

On a boat I had her rown
upon the tranquil river flown
whilst the fullest moon a-glown
where the snow had freshly snown.
By the time the cock had crown
she had finally to me she shown
that indeed she loved me sown.

Cheers
Michael
--
Still an attentive ear he lent Her speech hath caused this pain
But could not fathom what she meant Easier I count it to explain
She was not deep, nor eloquent. The jargon of the howling main
-- from Lewis Carroll: The Three Usenet Trolls
From:Adrian Bailey
Subject:Re: A glown poem
Date:Sun, 23 Jan 2005 13:22:45 GMT
"Michael Mendelsohn" wrote in message
news:41F229F3.DB6FB5A@msgid.michael.mendelsohn.de...
> Verbs ending in -ow always have a past particple ending in -owed
> (e.g. flow, has flowed). Some also have a PP ending in -own, although
> teh only one I can think of is sow.

blown, grown, mown, shown, thrown. Nice idea, btw, though there's some
confusion of tenses.

Adrian

> Earlier today, I tried to piece together a poem that illustrated the
> wrong past participle. Can anyone improve on it?
>
> On a boat I had her rown
> upon the tranquil river flown
> whilst the fullest moon a-glown
> where the snow had freshly snown.
> By the time the cock had crown
> she had finally to me she shown
> that indeed she loved me sown.
   

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