When you talk about yesterday’s underwater adventure,
which word do you employ to connote the past tense
of “dive”? Is one more correct than the other? This trivia
addict with the soul of a copy editor had to know.
Every dictionary consulted stated that either word
is acceptable, as did every website published by a selfanointed
grammar expert (and you might be surprised
how many English professors spend their spare time this
way). However, they agree that “dived” is the more traditional
form.
Some sources noted that in America, “dove” is most
prevalent in the Northeast, while “dived” is more popular
in the West and South. A couple reported that the
British—who, of course, are always right on matters of culture
and class—use “dived” exclusively. The one authoritative
answer came from the Associated Press Stylebook,
the bible for hard-news journalism: only “dived” is acceptable,
period.
While Undercurrent prefers to use “dived,” we use both
verbs, as do other dive publications (born out by a glance
at their pages as well as editors’ responses to queries).
“I usually edit it based on the context and how it
sounds,” wrote Ethan Gordon of Fathoms magazine in
one typical response. “‘Dove’ if it’s the writers voice, and
‘dived’ if it’s a more formal piece.”
If the issue ever comes up during a surface interval,
you can now be the most grammatically correct diver on
the boat.