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Cancelled or canceled?

Muse

Lifer
I present this as a public service. This one has been confounding me for a few years now. In general I'm a good speller, so I figured it's because you see both in the media. I just hit a page that says this:
- - - -
Best Answer - Chosen by Voters

I go back and forth between the two.

I am an American, and the standard American spelling use one "l".

My ex-husband was a Brit, and the standard British spelling uses two. He always insisted on "ll," and I sort of got into the habit.

Both are correct, one is simply American, the other British.

Webster's Dictionary shows both:

"Cancel \Can"cel\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Canceled or Cancelled;" etc.
 
^^ Firefox shows both as correct.

autocorrect.PNG


I use cancelled all the time though.
 
Busses or buses?

I'd use both, but in different contexts.
"He busses the table," but, "Inner-city buses."

As for cancelled or canceled, oddly enough I'd use the former as a verb and the latter as an adjective: "He cancelled the check," but describe the result as, "A canceled check."
 
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I'd use both, but in different contexts.
"He busses the table," but, "Inner-city buses."

Fuse - a device that protects a circuit from over load or a gunpowder filled cord to light a firecracker, etc. More than one: fuses.

Fuss: person on ATOT that complains. More than one: fusses.

Buses should rhyme with fuses. 😛

Confused? ha! The thing on a front of a bomb dropped out of a plane is called a fuze...
 
Fuse - a device that protects a circuit from over load or a gunpowder filled cord to light a firecracker, etc. More than one: fuses.

Fuss: person on ATOT that complains. More than one: fusses.

Buses should rhyme with fuses. 😛

Confused? ha! The thing on a front of a bomb dropped out of a plane is called a fuze...

On the other hand, Moose should rhyme with Geese.
 
Cancelled looks more proper to me.

One of the few words that the British spell differently than us that I believe they actually have right 😛
 
Never heard of buss (outside of the tradename for the fuse), always used bus bar. 😉

like bussing someone's cheek. iirc buss itself is a word (kissing, but maybe more briefly?) so busses is kind of confusing/misleading compared to buses.
 
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