
Past tense of 'catch': caught? catched? - WordReference Forums
Aug 30, 2006 · Catched is perfectly fine to use and has been in the english language for a very very long time, so long in fact that we actually rarely use that past tense and now prefer to use Caught. …
catched or caught - WordReference Forums
Oct 5, 2005 · Quel est le preterit du vb "to catch"? Y a t-il 2 possibilités ? Merci.
Catched or Caught - WordReference Forums
Aug 26, 2021 · Hey, I had came across a YouTube video which one’s saying “I catched it”, Then I serched this specific word in google and found in Merriam Webster dictionary that this word is used …
catch/catched a cold - WordReference Forums
Jan 25, 2017 · So a friend and I are arguing whether it is catch a cold or catched a cold. She says its catched a cold and I keep telling her that's incorrect but she keeps insisting it is correct. Please settle …
get caught up with vs catch up with | WordReference Forums
Dec 5, 2014 · No, 'catch up (with)' is the one you want: it means doing more of something so that less of it remains unfinished. 'Get (or be) caught up in' is different: it means being entangled with, involved …
I've got a cold vs I've caught a cold | WordReference Forums
Nov 9, 2011 · Which one is correct? I hear people say : I think I am catching a cold. But for present perfect they say: I have GOT a cold. Is it correct or it should be I CAUGHT a cold?
I catched [caught] up - WordReference Forums
Jun 3, 2011 · I was telling a friend that yesterday, in the ground floor of a building, I unexpectedely saw another friend and started having a short conversation with her before moving on. I kind of hesitated …
catch a cold or catch cold? - WordReference Forums
Nov 16, 2007 · The expressions mean something different: To catch a cold is to catch the disease. To catch cold, or to take cold is to stay out too long in cold weather and spend a long time shivering …
catch a train - WordReference Forums
Jan 22, 2025 · Hello everyone! When someone tells you that he caught a train, does he simply mean that he got on the train, or he implies that he went to the station in a hurry? I caught the 7.15 train to …
catch fire vs. catch on fire - WordReference Forums
Aug 10, 2010 · Hello, Although most of the dictionaries only suggest "to catch fire", I've read and heard quite a few times "to catch on fire". What's the difference, if any, between My car caught fire. My car …