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Writer's pictureLucian@going2paris.net

While I Was Walking....


Charlottesville

April 13, 2021

I chuckled when I saw the above dish towel — I’ve certainly had that thought. (I’m not going to comment on how the “was” is incorrect; the appropriate form would be “were,” right?)


Fun to hear this Bobby Freeman tune from 1959 while I walked around the Downtown Mall last evening.


Starting off as a beautiful sunny and cool morning. I walked to the Corner and got a couple of raisin bagels at Bodo’s.



Time to exercise and get ready for my 12:15 pm Pilates class. I asked LeeAnn to put me through the wringer today. (See below for more on this topic.)


For the record, I checked in with Jodie my physical therapist yesterday. She was pleased by the mobility of my spine. I’m giving myself a gold star for the effort I put in over the long haul to manage my scoliosis. 😁



'Wringer' or 'Ringer'?


And is it 'wringed,' 'wrang,' or 'wrung'?

Homophones (“one of two or more words pronounced alike but different in meaning or derivation or spelling”) tend to rank high in the list of words which have the power to trip people up, all the more so when one of them is relatively obscure. A fine example of this is the pair ringer and wringer. Do you put someone through the wringer or through the ringer? Is it hand-wringing or hand-ringing? And is the past tense of wring wringed, wrang, or wrung?


Wringer has a fairly literal meaning (“one that wrings, such as a machine or device for pressing out liquid or moisture”), which is much less in use nowadays than it once was; before the ubiquity of electric clothes dryers, wringers were considerably more common. The word also has a figurative meaning (“something that causes pain, hardship, or exertion”), which has eclipsed the laundering sense. The idiom through the wringer refers to having been through a series of very difficult or unpleasant experiences. This idiom came about in the early 20th century, and in initial use the experience it referred to was often that of questioning.


One of my first telephone interviews was with Mayor Queen, who chuckled when I asked the question. “I’d put him through a wringer to get all the information I could get out of him,” he said.

— The Winnipeg Tribune (Winnipeg, Can.), 15 May 1941


Florig will continue on duty in charge of the Strip district pending the police board hearing Friday when Dorsey proposed to put him through the wringer for “making false reports” about him.

— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 10 Mar. 1936


”He’s been trained so fine in the silence business that he hardly dares open his mouth when he eats. Go up there and put him through the wringer.” “Do what?” says the Bishop. “Give him the headquarters quiz,” says I.

— New York Tribune, 4 Aug. 1907


When describing the act of squeezing (either clothing or a person), the correct word is wringer; likewise with the act of hand-wringing (“an overwrought expression of concern or guilt”). The mistaken application of ringer or ringing where it would be more appropriate to use wringer or wringing is commonly found in edited prose (although not commonly enough that such use is accepted as a variant).


But, hey, once in a while it’s refreshing to see what is apparently a grass-roots movement work so spontaneously and successfully, without endless hand-ringing and deliberation.

— Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 17 Apr. 2000


Every table read, I’m like, “Ohhhh, I’m exhausted.” They put Liza through the ringer.

— The New York Times, 1 Jun. 2018


"The killer instinct — I basically sharpen that," McGuire said. "We teach them to be comfortable being uncomfortable.” McGuire put VCU through the ringer for three days last year. This year, he said, VCU's coaches asked him to "up the ante.”

— Ben Cohen, The Wall Street Journal, 23 Nov. 2012


Ringer also has a definite literal meaning (“one that sounds especially by ringing”) that has been largely supplanted by figurative ones; the word can also mean “one that enters a competition under false representations” or “one that strongly resembles another.” The latter of these is often found paired with the word dead. While it is theoretically possible to have a dead wringer, provided one wished to use a broadened sense of dead in relation to a malfunctioning clothing wringer, you would do well to avoid using this turn of phrase.


For example, there’s a pensive, suspender-wearing TV host named Barry King, who is a dead wringer for CNN’s Larry King.

— The Daily News (Murfreesboro, TN), 7 Sept. 2004


The melding of news and entertainment became complete with Saturday Night Live cast member Tina Fey’s dead-wringer impression of Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, and Palin returned the favour by appearing on the show.

— The Vancouver Sun (Vancouver, BC, Can.), 29 Dec. 2009


As for the proper declension of wring, the past tense of the verb is always going to be wrung. This is simpler than the habits of the verb ring, which changes its past tense depending on which meaning is intended. When ring is used to mean “encircle,” “shape like a ring,” or “to provide with a ring” ringed is called for. If, however, ring is used in reference to making a sound (or placing a telephone call) the past tense is rang and the past participle is rung.


“After Adam had rung me at three and five o’clock in the morning I could have cheerfully wrung his neck; I rang work the next day and said I felt like I’d been through the wringer and wouldn’t be coming in.”



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dsmithuva75
Apr 14, 2021

I was thinking you would say that.....

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dsmithuva75
Apr 13, 2021

"was" is correct for first-person past tense....


https://www.grammar.com/Conjugating-the-Verb-To-Be

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Lucian@going2paris.net
Lucian@going2paris.net
Apr 13, 2021
Replying to

I still think “were” would be correct. From the link you sent:


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