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Which form should be used for the past tense "freezed" or "frozen" or are both acceptable?

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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Frozen

Is the state something is in after it freezes. Not the past tense.

That water is frozen.

And,

Froze

Is the past tense.

We froze the water, so now it is frozen.

And Freezed is simply wrong, to the best of my knowledge.

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1  
I wonder though if it might be used akin to "broad-casted" and "flied out". I see it a lot in association with technology. – NateMPLS May 6 '11 at 0:47

Froze is the past tense of freeze and frozen is the past participle. Freezed, while occasionally used, is incorrect (even my spellcheck is flagging it).

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Commonly used? I've only heard small children use "freezed". – Matthew Read May 5 '11 at 20:03
@MatthewRead half a million hits on google... maybe not that common. – snumpy May 5 '11 at 21:28
1  
Google's numbers aren't reliable. I can't find a good article I read about it recently, but here's an example of numbers varying wildly. As well, a lot of the results seem to be talking about the error, or using it for SEO, etc. I would also expect non-native English speakers to use it, since it would be a natural word to form if you didn't know. – Matthew Read May 5 '11 at 21:35
@MatthewRead I'm sorry that my word choice has caused such distress. I have duly modified my answer. – snumpy May 5 '11 at 23:10

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