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I don't see you having stated what the perfect tense of wreak should be. Wreaked is just wrong.

I dunno, might the words work and wreak have similar roots and wrought is past tense of both ?

keep to the Fen Causeway

by Helen (lareinagal at yahoo dot co dot uk) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 12:09:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I don't even think "wrought" is a real word.  I think y'all just use it to screw with us.

WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
by Drew J Jones (blahblahblah@blahblahblah.com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 12:14:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]
now I know why your bridges collapse, you built them out of wrecked iron rather than wrought iron didn't you

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 12:22:00 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Could be.

WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
by Drew J Jones (blahblahblah@blahblahblah.com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 12:24:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Nope. Wrought is an archaic past form of work. (Wrought iron?) Wreak is a different verb.

There's probably confusion caused by the continuing use of the expression "wrought havoc", which may easily be understood to imply a present form "wreak havoc", when it should be "work havoc".

I don't think it matters much. Of course the speakers make the language. But don't knock the "academic analysis": the OED is based on a colossal sum of historical knowledge of the English language.

When locusts move on, they leave nothing behind

by afew (afew(a in a circle)eurotrib_dot_com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 12:56:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The past tense of wreak is wreaked after all?

Personally, "wrought iron" sounds way more cool than "worked iron". Gets more points.

by Nomad on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 01:13:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
One of the great things about the OED is that every meanings are accompanied by a sourced quotation of the earliest known use of the word with a given meaning.

When the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done. — John M. Keynes
by Migeru (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 01:16:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It is wreaked, as stated below by Nomad. Sorry for not being more explicit. The las blockquote of my original post indicate wreaked, in the quotations it provides. In fact, all past tenses of the verb to wreak are wreaked on the OED wreak page. Wrought is only meantioned as a past tense of work, which is sometimes confused for past of to wreak.

The page for work is very, very long. And includes about 1 billion spellings over the ages. With quite shifting meanings as well. Them not easy words, the old ones.

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 01:47:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The plot thickens, and your idea that "wreak" and "work" might share the same root turns out to be right.

Online Etymology Dictionary

wreak
O.E. wrecan "avenge," originally "to drive, drive out, punish" (class V strong verb; past tense wræc, pp. wrecen), from P.Gmc. *wrekanan (cf. O.S. wrekan, O.N. reka, O.Fris. wreka, M.Du. wreken "to drive, push, compel, pursue, throw," O.H.G. rehhan, Ger. rächen "to avenge," Goth. wrikan "to persecute"), from PIE base *werg- "to work, to do" (cf. Lith. vergas "distress," vergas "slave," O.C.S. vragu "enemy," L. urgere; see urge (v.)). Meaning "inflict or take vengeance," with on, is recorded from c.1489; that of "inflict or cause (damage or destruction)" is attested from 1817.
wretch
O.E. wrecca "wretch, stranger, exile," from P.Gmc. *wrakjan (cf. O.S. wrekkio, O.H.G. reckeo "a banished person, exile," Ger. recke "renowned warrior, hero"), related to O.E. wreccan "to drive out, punish" (see wreak). Sense of "vile, despicable person" developed in O.E., reflecting the sorry state of the outcast, as presented in much of Anglo-Saxon verse (e.g. "The Wanderer"). A Ger. word for "misery" is Elend, from O.H.G. elilenti "sojourn in a foreign land, exile."
wreck (n.)
1228, "goods cast ashore after a shipwreck, flotsam," from Anglo-Fr. wrec, from O.N. *wrek (cf. Norw., Icel. rek) "wreck, flotsam," related to reka "to drive, push" (see wreak). The meaning "a shipwreck" is first recorded 1463; that of "a wrecked ship" is from 1500. General sense of "remains of anything that has been ruined" is recorded from 1713; applied by 1795 to dissipated persons. The verb meaning "to destroy, ruin" is first recorded 1510. Wreckage is first attested 1837.
wrack (n.)
c.1386, "wrecked ship," probably from M.Du. wrak "wreck," cognate with O.E. wræc "misery, punishment," and wrecan "to punish, drive out" (see wreak). The meaning "damage, disaster, destruction" (in wrack and ruin) is from c.1408, from the O.E. word. Sense of "seaweed, etc., cast up on shore" is recorded from 1513. The verb meaning "to ruin or wreck" (originally of ships) is recorded from 1562, from earlier intrans. sense "to be shipwrecked" (1470). Often confused in this sense since 16c. with rack (1) in the verb sense of "to torture on the rack;" to wrack one's brains is thus erroneous.

PIE:

Introduction & Abbreviations

PIE Proto-Indo-European, the hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family. The time scale is much debated, but the most recent date proposed for it is about 5,500 years ago.

However, "wreaked" is still the correct (modern) past form of "wreak". If it had a different form (since we see here it was a "strong" verb, in other words formed its tenses by umlaut or vowel change within the word, and these are the Old English verbs that give us "irregular" verbs today), it would have been "wreak" pronounced "rek", like "read", "read", pronounced "reed", "red".

Why does "work", a regular verb, have this old past form "wrought"?

Online Etymology Dictionary

work (v.)
a fusion of O.E. wyrcan (past tense worhte, pp. geworht), from P.Gmc. *wurkijanan; and O.E. wircan (Mercian) "to work, operate, function," formed relatively late from P.Gmc. noun *werkan (see work (n.)).

So one of the Old English forms had the past tense "worhte", which is obviously the ancestor of "wrought", while another, later, form was derived from the noun meaning "work", and was formed as a regular verb. That's the one that has survived till today, though we still say "wrought iron", "overwrought", etc.

I bet you're glad you got to the end of this (if...).

When locusts move on, they leave nothing behind

by afew (afew(a in a circle)eurotrib_dot_com) on Wed Jun 4th, 2008 at 04:49:58 PM EST
[ Parent ]

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