The US spelling does not double the L (canceling, canceled)
but the UK spelling does (cancelling, cancelled).
Either is considered correct.
Present tense
I cancel / we cancel / they cancel
you cancel
he, she, it cancels / they cancel
Present Perfect
I / we / you / they have canceledhe, she, it has canceled
Present progressive
I am canceling / we are canceling / they are canceling
you are canceling
he, she, it is canceling
Present Perfect Progressive
I / you /we / they have been canceling
he, she, it has been canceling
---
Past Tense
I / we /you/ he, she, it / they canceled
Past Perfect
I / we /you/ he, she, it / they had canceled
Past progressive
I was canceling / we were canceling / they were canceling
you were canceling
he, she, it was canceling
Past Perfect Progressive
I / you /we / they / he, she, it had been canceling
---
Future Tense
I / we /you /they /he, she, it / will cancel
Future Perfect
I / we /you/ they/ he, she, it / will have canceled
Future progressive
I / we / you / they / he, she, it will be canceling
Future Perfect Progressive
I / we /you /they /he, she, it will have been canceling
The correct spelling of the word is cancelled.
An example sentence is "due to the weather, the march had to be cancelled".
You did spell preach correctly.
Committed is spelled correctly.
Regions you have spelt is correctly. :)
You have spell it correctly in the question … LUMBERJACKS
You spell it like question.
Tasteless. You spell it correctly in the question.
I spell them correctly.
you did
"correctly"
It was "cancelled" because you can't spell
You try to spell million correctly, so the answer is: one million and seventy.You try to spell million correctly, so the answer is: one million and seventy.You try to spell million correctly, so the answer is: one million and seventy.You try to spell million correctly, so the answer is: one million and seventy.
Nope. Still on G4 if I remember correctly.