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TWTS: Don't let spellcheck thunderstorm on your parade

Few things can shut down an outdoor swimming pool faster than a good old-fashioned summer thunderstorm.

English professor Anne Curzan is a longtime swimmer who swims in a master’s program. Recently, one of her coaches emailed another swimmer about holding practice at an outdoor pool, as long as it wasn’t “thunderstorming.”

Listen to the conversation.

The email program’s spellchecker did not care for that and branded "thunderstorming" with a scarlet underline. But why? We take all kinds of nouns and turn them into verbs. Why not “thunderstorm?”

Thunderstorm as a noun goes back to the 1600s. The verb, however, seems to be quite new. Curzan couldn’t find it in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the American Heritage Dictionary, or the Oxford English Dictionary.

The oldest example Curzan has found so far comes from a 1972 linguistics book by James McCawley. In it, McCawley writes, “We can say ‘A thunderstorm began,’ but not so naturally, ‘It is thunderstorming.’”

In other words, he doesn’t think “thunderstorm” makes a great verb.

McCawley goes on to argue that general terms like “rain” and “storm” tend to be the type of nouns that become verbs. He gives the example, “The thunderstorm began to rain down on us.” Here, “rain” becomes the verb and “thunderstorm” remains the noun.

However, there are plenty of examples of people happily using the verb form, such as this 1991 example: “The skies had gotten black and it was thunderstorming.”

“To thunderstorm” may be more specific than “to rain” or “to storm,” but at some point, we as speakers decided it was an okay verb. Do you use “thunderstorm” this way?

Copyright 2019 Michigan Radio

Rebecca Kruth is a reporter interning with Aspen Public Radio over the summer of 2013. Originally from Eaton Rapids, Michigan, Rebecca is thrilled to be spending her summer making radio in the mountains. Though she's always been a public radio fan, Rebecca explored several other career paths including teaching high school English before making her way to the airwaves. During her graduate studies at Michigan State University, Rebecca decided radio was where she needed to be and squeezed some journalism courses into her American Studies degree program. After graduation, she snagged internships on the news desk at WKAR, East Lansing and the arts and culture desk at WBEZ, Chicago. When she's not chasing stories, Rebecca enjoys cycling, photography, listening to This American Life and wandering around the country with her husband, James.
Rebecca Kruth
Rebecca Kruth is the host of Weekend Edition and a reporter at Michigan Radio. She first came to the station in 2014 as a Morning Edition intern. After earning degrees in English and American Studies from Michigan State University, Rebecca began her radio career as a newsroom intern at WKAR in East Lansing. She completed additional news internships at WBEZ Chicago and KAJX Aspen. When she’s not on the airwaves, Rebecca enjoys hiking, Korean food and wandering the country with her husband James. She's also Bruce Springsteen's number one fan.
Anne Curzan is the Geneva Smitherman Collegiate Professor of English and an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor at the University of Michigan. She also holds faculty appointments in the Department of Linguistics and the School of Education.