Oriented or orientated which is correct
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Both oriented and orientated can be used in these sentences. However, in common usage, oriented is preferred. The word orientated is a meaningless variation on the word, and it is most likely the result of people thinking that " orientated " is the past verb form of the noun "orientation. Orientated is not at all common in the United States, and while it is a little more common elsewhere, it is still much less used than oriented.
There is, however, no equivalent verb. The closest verb is occidentalize , meaning to conform to western ideas or customs. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Strange thing, language. Can it be used as an adjective in participle? I think the connotation to the shunned use of the word Orient or Oriental to describe the place and people from Eastern continents may be the culprit here….
During flight school, we were told that early international airline pilots were the origin of the word orientate. Visit holduphsi.
Both of which I like to do. Sometimes in the same evening. It sounds so horrid to me. Thanks for the info!! While I prefer the former, many of my colleagues use the more clumsy sounding latter term. They both stem from the same word but have slightly different meanings. To orientate mean to find yourself geographically using a compass, so to be disorientated means to be unable to find your way. Oriented has something missing, just like your neighbor for neighbour and the missing o in maneuvre that Americans like.
It bugs me that people use orient instead of orientate. I have a masters degree and people tell me that orientate is incorrect.
Following your orientation example, should we start using verbs like combinate, temptate, and imaginate? Welcome to English. I think that whichever word you choose reflects your education and place of upbringing, and is no cause for to demonize the other. I mean demonise. Hi Kim! Great response!
You are certainly correct. I grew up in Montreal to British parents. It seemed that orientate was the most common word in question when I grew up.
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