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Rota'd, Rotad, Rotaed Or Rota-Ed?

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misscherry | 09:29 Fri 30th Apr 2021 | Arts & Literature
8 Answers
Another English question from me please - what's the right way to write rota as a past tense verb? As in, "She's been rota'd to work". Rota'd? Rota-ed? Rotad? Rotaed? They all look weird!
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I wouldn't use it as a verb, you can use "rostered" or "scheduled" as alternatives.
if forced to I would use rota'd but I agree that rostered or scheduled would be better.
or shes been put on the rota to work blah
there are some words and word forms that are not written - innit

no one would write - " it's foo innit?" but you see this on a daily basis on AB - the voice of reason and temperance - and logic
and sense

technically rota is a Latin noun and it is being used as verb/ participle. There is a verb roster - which has a past participle rostered
clearly related
Yeah foo
in Mayor of Casterbridge - by the famous author Hardy. Henchard tried to out-Farfrae, Farfrae - based they say on out-herod , Herod (*)

but he never uses a past tense.

(*) at a wedding - flinging hinself around as in C19 daddy dancing

just saying and trying to help
I've just checked with the Oxford English Dictionary, where 'rota' is only recognised as a noun (and not as a verb).

Like, TCL, I'd prefer to go with 'rostered' or similar.
This is easy.

The Latin verb form to rotate is 'rotare'...

Rota is the noun.

So in modern usage, rotared is the past participle verb of rota.

Simples! :-D

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