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It "cost, costs, costed" 15 dollars to have a form filled out at the doctors office.

2006-11-06 23:28:25 · 8 answers · asked by Carl 1 in Education & Reference Other - Education

8 answers

cost

or it cost me 15 dollers to ect etc.

2006-11-06 23:30:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Cost

2006-11-06 23:36:47 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Cost

2006-11-06 23:36:06 · answer #3 · answered by Agent99 5 · 1 2

"Cost"'s past tense is just that, "cost". The English language is peppered with inconcistencies and exceptions to "the rules"...

It cost 15 dollars to have a form filled out at the doctors office.
-> Sounds a bit wrong, probably sounds better like this:
It cost me 15 dollars to have a form filled out at the doctors office.

2006-11-06 23:43:54 · answer #4 · answered by levinedym 2 · 0 2

JeanJean is correct, the answer is "Costed".

Used in a sentence:
It had costed me 12 dollars!
It may have costed me my life.

2006-11-06 23:38:18 · answer #5 · answered by Lottare 2 · 2 0

cost

2006-11-06 23:33:26 · answer #6 · answered by gurpreet 1 · 1 2

That which is GRAMMATICALLY CORRECT...Conforming to the rules of grammar...


Past tense is "costed".


COST

VERB:
cost , cost·ing , costs, costed
VERB:
intr.

To require a specified payment, expenditure, effort, or loss: It costs more to live in the city.
VERB:
tr.

To have as a price.
To cause to lose, suffer, or sacrifice: Participating in the strike cost me my job.
past tense and past participle costed To estimate or determine the cost of: The accountants costed out our expenses.

2006-11-06 23:31:17 · answer #7 · answered by Jeanjean 4 · 1 3

COST

2006-11-06 23:37:09 · answer #8 · answered by dragonlady 4 · 0 2

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