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I am going through the following sentence.

I looked up at my boss and his eyes were rivetted on me

google search auto corrects it to riveted. One of the meaning to rivet from Oxford is

direct (one’s eyes or attention) intently

  1. rivetted (using double t - tt) is incorrect?
  2. In the above sentence what meaning best suits for rivetted?
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    The single 't' is correct because in this case, doubling of the consonant is determined by stress; when the last syllable (having the 't') is stressed, the 't' gets doubled, otherwise it remains single. – Decapitated Soul May 07 '21 at 11:11
  • @Decapitated Soul thanks for explanation of why riveted is correct – Rachayita May 07 '21 at 13:19
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    A rivet affixes two metals together. Eyes riveted means they were fixed on something powerfully. – Yosef Baskin May 07 '21 at 20:29

2 Answers2

10

The Oxford English Dictionary lists both: riveted, rivetted. But it seems in both US and UK, riveted is currently the more common.

Ngram:
X

"direct (one’s eyes or attention) intently" matches the quotation given.

GEdgar
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  • thanks for Ngram. Before -1835 rivetted was used mostly as per Ngram. I will use riveted while writing. – Rachayita May 07 '21 at 13:24
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    I note that Shakespeare used the single-t version, despite being before 1835. – GEdgar May 07 '21 at 13:39
  • Shakespeare is great no doubt. For this question GEdgar(you) for providing Ngram and Decapitated Soul for providing the reason of Why riveted is correct are more than that to me. – Rachayita May 07 '21 at 23:08
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It should be riveted to be correct.

The rule for doubling a trailing T is when it's stressed. For example:

  • targeted - pronounced as TAR-ge-tid, same for targeting (marketed, marketing)
  • regretted - pronounced as ri-GRE-tid, same for regretting (admitted, admitting and for all single-syllable words like chat, plot, put, sit etc.)

Given rivet is pronounced as RI-vit (Wiktionary), riveted should not have double T. I would've spoken ri-VE-tid had I seen rivetted.

P.S. The same rule applies to a wide range of words ending in vowel + consonant, like cap, repel, rob, blur, etc.

iBug
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  • +1 for pointing out how "rivetted" commands a different pronunciation (ri•VET•id) and changes the meaning, as in to be "vetted" again. – Mari-Lou A May 15 '21 at 05:47