Participles as adjectives

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Participles as adjectives

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Participles as adjectives Participles can often be used as adjectives before nouns, or after be and other copular verbs A fallen leaf A lost dog An interesting book Screaming children Not all participles can be used as adjectives before nouns – for example, we say a lost dog but not a found dog It is not possible to give clear rules about this – students will learn the most usual combinations as they learn the rest of their English We often use participles after nouns in order to define or identify the nouns The people questioned gave their own versions of the story (= The people who were questioned gave their own versions of the story.) (NOT The questioned people gave their own versions of the story.) We often use those with a participle to mean ‘the ones who are / were’ Those questioned gave very different opinions (= The ones who were questioned gave different opinions.) Those selected should report for duty on Monday The exact meaning of a few participles depends upon their position in the sentence Compare: A concerned person = a worried person The person concerned = the people who is / are affected or involved An adopted child = a child who is brought up by people who are not his / her biological parents The course of action adopted = the course of action is / was chosen Stay on top of your writing! Download our grammar guide from www.englishgrammar.org to stay up-to-date Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)

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