Brazil's Federal District Governor
Jose Roberto Arruda ``fired'' the present participle from his
administration, citing inefficiency.
Banning the verb form, which ends in ``ndo'' in Portuguese
(``ing'' in English), was done to prevent government officials
from using continuous tenses to obscure progress -- or the lack
of it.
Decree No. 28.314 was issued to end vague promises by
government officials, such as: ``We'll be taking steps,'' Globo
news agency reported, citing aides to Arruda it didn't identify
by name.