A Word, Please: Delete the S? The dictionary suggests yes
Every time I see the preposition âtowardsâ in an article Iâm editing, I delete the S. Iâve been doing this as long as I can recall, decades, and itâs been going on so long I donât even remember why. I just know that, for whatever reason, âtowardsâ simply wonât do.
This habit stands out among my other brain-on-autopilot edits because I never recheck this one. I never do a quick search of my AP Stylebook or my dictionary. I just delete the S.
I think about it so little that, in the 20-odd years Iâve been writing about grammar, itâs never crossed my mind to make âtowardâ and its cousins including âbackward,â âforwardâ and âafterwardâ subjects of a column.
Itâs time. And Iâm pleased to report that the Associated Press Stylebook â that is, the rulebook I follow for most of my editing work â backs me up. It says, quite simply, in its entry for âtowardâ: âNot towards.â
Thatâs the whole entry. Whew. My laziness hasnât come back to haunt me the way it did when I kept spelling out âpercentâ years after AP style switched to using â%.â
Of course, that rule really only applies in edited text. So what about everyday writing? Is âtowardsâ allowed there? In my reading of Merriam-Websterâs online dictionary, the answer is yes.
Merriamâs dictionary doesnât have an entry for âtowards,â but it lists it under its entry for âtowardâ as a âvariant.â This tells us two things: 1. Itâs OK to use âtowards,â and 2. Merriamâs dictionary prefers âtoward.â
Merriam-Websterâs Dictionary of English Usage, which is a usage guide and not a dictionary, goes deeper: âMany commentators have observed that âtowardâ is the more common choice in American English, while the preference in British English is âtowards.â Our evidence confirms that such is indeed the case. Both words are commonly used in the U.S., but âtowardâ is undoubtedly prevalent.â
The word dates back in Old English to sometime before the year 899, when it was written âtoweardes.â According to Chambers Dictionary of Etymology, âtoweardesâ came from combining âtoâ with âweard,â which was a noun meaning direction, plus âes,â which indicated possession. Sometime before the year 1300, Old English seemed to drop the S, using just âtoweard.â And within a century or two, âtowardâ and âtowardsâ had appeared.
Back in the 1800s, âtowardsâ was dominant in all the printed sources reflected in Googleâs Ngram Viewer, which includes lots of American publications. But shortly after the turn of the 20th century, âtowardâ overtook âtowards,â and has dominated ever since, despite a slight reversal of that trend that started just about seven years ago.
Some common if questionable English usage may be technically wrong but just fine in real life, while other usage may depend on user preference, writes June Casagrande. Either way, sticklers will express their disdain.
As American English speakers became less inclined to add the S, British speakers kept it. Today, both spellings are correct in the U.S., though âtowardâ is the best choice if you want to emulate professionally edited writing.
As for âafterwardâ and âafterwards,â itâs the same story: American publishing usually drops the S, while British sources may keep it, according to Merriamâs usage guide. Merriamâs dictionary, meanwhile, doesnât have an entry for âafterwardsâ and instead reroutes those searches to its entry for âafterward,â where it says the S-spelling is a variant.
âBackwardâ seems least controversial. Merriamâs usage guide doesnât consider the issue worth mentioning at all, while the dictionary lists the S-spelling only as a variant of the more standard âbackward.â
Hereâs where things get weird: âforwards,â which I donât recall ever hearing outside the expression âbackwards and forwards,â does have its own entry in Merriamâs dictionary, suggesting it has more legitimacy than all those other S-forms we talked about above. But because its definition refers readers to the entry for âforward,â without the S, itâs clear that, just like âtoward,â âafterwardâ and âbackward,â âforwardâ is more proper without the S.
June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at [email protected].
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