Questions tagged [past-participles]

For questions about past participle forms of verbs.

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Get or Have Something Done with Past Participle Verb (Participle Adjective or Passive Voice)

I am a bit confused. Here are my examples: I get my home cleaned every other week. I'm having my office painted. They had their toilet fixed. Am I correct to think that my past participle verbs are ...
Alexander Jorgensen's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
39 views

Bored or a bored person

a. He is bored. b. He is a bored person. Is it correct to use a noun with past participle when used an adjective? For example, The tired singer is not singing a new song. How to use past participle ...
Abid's user avatar
  • 353
-3 votes
1 answer
173 views

Rules for Joining by Past Participle [closed]

The sentences below have different subjects. I saw a child. He was burnt. But we can join/add them using a past participle, and write- I saw a burnt child. I have not been able to find any rule ...
Michael's user avatar
  • 119
0 votes
2 answers
46 views

Does the order of adjectives matter in this case?

I peeled an apple, and then sliced the apple. So I sliced the apple after I peeled the apple. In this case, doesn't it matter whether I say "peeled sliced apple" or "sliced peeled apple&...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
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Improperly Healed Broken Bones

https://www.pennstatehealth.org/services-treatments/malunion-fractures Improperly Healed Broken Bones Does it really make sense? I think it's contradictory because bones can't be healed and broken ...
user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
85 views

“bled rags“ or "rugs"?

I'm trying to find pictures by googling bled rugs or bled rags. Can't find anything, not even in the common results. It seems to me, it's supposed to be perfectly common usage, but the world doesn't ...
Burglar's user avatar
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0 votes
2 answers
78 views

Is it 'fitted with' or 'fit with'? [closed]

Is it 'fit with' or 'fitted with'? In: A stand fitted with a protractor
The Amateur Coder's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
71 views

Couldn't have cared less vs couldn't care less in context

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee starts with the following short paragraph: When he was nearly thirteen, my brother Jem got his arm badly broken at the elbow. When it healed, and Jem's fears of ...
Victor B.'s user avatar
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0 votes
1 answer
36 views

Passive voice: see somebody ___ (send) back into society

Which one should I fill in the blank [being sent/ to be sent/ sent]: Without access to books in prison, my world view would still be shaped by violence. It’s not who I want to see ( ) back into ...
Robin's user avatar
  • 9
1 vote
1 answer
30 views

Is it possible to change (gone) to (been) and the answer still be correct?

Here is a question Put the verbs in brackets into a suitable tense form ____ you _____ (go) to your dentist recently? Typical answer: Have you gone to your dentist recently? I noticed many users ...
Ahmad Mohammad's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
162 views

Why it should be 'estimated', instead of 'is estimated'?

The hurricane caused damage ......... at $300 million. What I have chosen: is estimated The answer should have been: estimated Is estimated adjective, what type of adjective, or what parts of speech ...
Han's user avatar
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1 answer
206 views

Has shrank or has shrunk? [closed]

My sentence is: The total number of unique patients that fits this criterion has shrank from 10 to 5. But I'm not sure if instead I should say has shrunk?
hulio_entredas's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
36 views

Appending -ed to irregular verbs, obscure dialect? [closed]

Some examples (born->borned, saw->sawed): Interview with Celia Black, Tyler, Texas, October 11, 1974 (audio, transcript) Elmer Sparks (04:30): ...back when you were borned... Elmer Sparks (04:...
eight_ball's user avatar
7 votes
3 answers
3k views

Why was 'Having seen that it is about to rain...' not the correct answer?

In the example sentence, I initially interpreted the sentence structure as 'We have seen that is about to rain.' However, the correct answer was 'seeing,' with the appropriate context being 'We see ...
Han's user avatar
  • 159
1 vote
2 answers
40 views

Aspects of **have** in "You have me all confused!"

I am a speaker of American English, mid-Atlantic dialect. I was thinking of scenarios like the following: Yesterday, you said to do it this way, and this morning you said to do it that way, and now ...
TimR's user avatar
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2 votes
1 answer
42 views

past participle indicating time

And as for staying tea, I can't hear of it; for there's this dairymaid, now she knows she's to be married, turned Michaelmas, she'd as lief pour the new milk into the pig-trough as into the pans. (...
ForOU's user avatar
  • 1,677
4 votes
2 answers
181 views

What does this past participle attribute refer to?

An excerpt from this article: Such solutions all take quantum states to be objective properties of the physical system they describe and not as catalogs of personal judgments about those physical ...
xiaohuamao's user avatar
-4 votes
1 answer
64 views

The usage of "COME" in these sentences [closed]

These are original sentences uttered by natives. 1 There are some very rare birds come by here. 2 You are a poor boy from Ireland come to London. I wonder what COME means in them. According to the ...
user1425's user avatar
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2 votes
4 answers
191 views

What's the difference between "conflicted relationships" and "conflicting relationships"?

What's the difference between adjectives and past participles? For example, interesting types and interested types? Update: That example was not really good. Take a look at this one: "Creating ...
John's user avatar
  • 39
1 vote
1 answer
29 views

"employed people" vs "people employed"

Two sentences Manufacturing kept growing until 1980 when it peaked at about 10 million people employed. Manufacturing kept growing until 1980 when it peaked at about 10 million employed people. What ...
dmjy's user avatar
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1 vote
2 answers
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Merging "the lawn is trampled on" & "the lawn is sparse/scattered/..."

Let's start with the skeleton sentence: I looked at the lawn of the playground. People trample on the lawn of the playground, so it becomes sparse/scattered/... Q1: Which word should I use to ...
Dávid Laczkó's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
151 views

Does the sentence containing "I’ve done made" make sense?

I’ve done made a black tea with a slice of lime on it . it appeared in a group chat that include many non-English native speakers and seems odd to me. since "done" can be a transitive verb, ...
novice's user avatar
  • 25
0 votes
0 answers
35 views

present participle as an adverbial?

The use of some words in English grammar resources is expressed as follows: 1-) I passed the exam by studying. 2-) I cut the paper using scissor. Why isn't '' by '' added in 2 ? or Why isn't the word '...
emilywenly's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
27 views

Please help; this is giving me an ulcer -walled, -wall, or no wall at all?

Okay, so I'm editing a book on architecture that's as poorly written as it is dry. My biggest issue right now is the use of the word "walled"; do you think this needs to be rewritten as ...
Bridget Manzella's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
82 views

Can I use "fixed" as antonym of "broken"?

I am wondering to know when something is broken, after repairing, can I say it is fixed or should I say it has been fixed. Can I used fixed as an adjective and antonym of broken?
Saman Mj's user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
101 views

did or had done [duplicate]

1a) I didn't know what he did. 1b) I didn't know what he'd done. The context is "He stole from my house, and I didn't know it at the time of speaking" what would I use? Do they both mean the ...
Romy Learner's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
30 views

How many tickets do you have left? (the modification of 'left')

How many tickets do you have left? How many tickets do you have? What is the parts of speech of 'left' and what does the 'left' modify?
gomadeng's user avatar
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0 votes
1 answer
27 views

Why are "pleased" in "I'm pleased." and "confused" in "I'm confused." adjectives rather than participles?

I was told here that in: (1) I'm pleased. (2) I'm confused. "pleased" and "confused" are participial adjectives. I can't understand why. Could tell me please why they aren't ...
Loviii's user avatar
  • 4,232
8 votes
7 answers
430 views

"I don't want to get bit by mosquitoes"-Is that correct?

I was at my house and bugs were flying in. Then I said, "I don't want to get bit by mosquitoes". Then my dad said "the word is bitten. Bit is incorrect". Was my statement correct?
user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
332 views

Passive voice without "to be"? Or use past participle after a noun to describe it?

Sometimes I see some sentences look like passive voice, but don't have a verb "to be". For example: "The goals set in the initial phase of a project can heavily influence your work.&...
Hana Fuchihara's user avatar
4 votes
3 answers
694 views

Perfect fit for a grammatical error

Yesterday, I had an exam in which this objective type question was asked. Select the most appropriate option that can substitute the underlined segment in the given sentence. She wished she __ ...
Sudhir Sharma's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
108 views

When do you put a participle after a noun? [duplicate]

In Seattle, Washington, high schooler Light Turner stumbles across the "Death Note," a mysterious leather-bound notebook with instructions that state that by writing a person's name down ...
kuwabara's user avatar
  • 1,468
0 votes
1 answer
48 views

Being + past participle form

I was wondering to know what kind of grammar has been used in the below sentence in regards to being+ing. How should I make this kind of sentence? The strike led to classes being cancelled for about ...
Saman Mj's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
24 views

Is "run" in the past participle

That doesn’t mean lying down and becoming fooled, or letting foreign corporations run uncontrolled. I'm not sure about the structure. Is "run" the past participle or base form (bare ...
ForOU's user avatar
  • 1,677
19 votes
3 answers
5k views

Is "molten" the past participle of "melt"?

Longman tells me that melt is a regular verb, and molten is simply an adjective. But in the irregular verb appendix of the Shanghai High School English Exam Vocabulary word book, molten is the past ...
Thomas Peng's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
61 views

Is "candidates WERE neither able to build...nor SUBSTANTIATED it with facts" grammatical?

I am learning English as a second language. I was going through the feedbacks of examiners, who conduct/mark CSS exams (this is a competitive exam conducted to appoint Government officers in Pakistan),...
Muhammad Umair's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
29 views

Title case: Which is better ? pre or post-modifier in this case?

Followings are titles for a thesis on Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s Allegory of the Good Government. Ambrogio Lorenzetti depicted two Justices in his picture. Among the four, which one is grammatically best ? ...
Japanese English teacher's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
194 views

How do I know whether the past participle form is an adjective or a passive verb?

A past participle can either be an adjective or a passive-verb form. For example. He was excited about the movie (Here the world 'excited' is an adjective) An adjective is used to describe a person (...
Rav Rk's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
1 answer
43 views

Why don't the adjectives “brisk, bold” match with the past participle “blunted”?

His one-word send-off: brisk, bold, and blunted. Why is blunted used, rather than "blunt"? And also why aren't brisk and bold "brisked and bolded"?
Rosé Cop.'s user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
190 views

“being raised” followed by a verb

While reading David Crystal's Sounds Appealing, I came across the following sentence. There was a Pronunciation Unit that dealt with queries (such as how to pronounce the name of a foreign place or ...
Bhaskar from India's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
43 views

"used therein" vs "in use" vs "used" and "among" vs "between" [closed]

I want to use the following sentence: I already explained 10 algorithms. As a result, the only difference (between / among) the algorithms is the blah-blah-blah model (used / in use / used therein).
Danny_Kim's user avatar
  • 469
1 vote
2 answers
946 views

"Studies have shown..." vs "Studies have showed..."

My teacher corrected one of my writing assignments saying that 'have showed' is incorrect and that 'have shown' is the correct conjugation. But when I look online, I see that my version is more ...
user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
256 views

What is the function of 'having seen' in this sentence?

I am reading my text Why Do Friendships End? by Allison Hunter, there is a sentence confused me. She referred to having seen the question in one of my articles, Mystery of Friendship. I don't know ...
Beau Garçon Idol Lucianus's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
187 views

Did not have + past participle sentences

Usually we use "past perfect negative" as in "I had not eaten a burger when he arrived" But could you pls tell me if we could also use "did not have plus past participle"?...
Bilal Zafar's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
2k views

Thank you for + ing or thank you for having + past participle

I'm wondering if there is a difference between the following forms: Thank you for downloading the file (for + ing) Thank you for having downloaded the file (for + having + past participle) Both ...
floatingpurr's user avatar
9 votes
7 answers
3k views

In the sentence "The table was set for lunch" is "set" a verb or an adjective?

The table was set for lunch I want to see if this is a passive sentence. I think if the word "set" is a verb it is passive, but if “set” is an adjective it would be an active one.
Dan's user avatar
  • 89
0 votes
1 answer
39 views

The vanishing glass vs The vanished glass

I was reading a grammar book by M. Swan about present and past participle that are used as adjectives when I came across this example: a vanished civilization. In his book Oxford Grammar, he explains ...
user516076's user avatar
  • 5,012
2 votes
2 answers
48 views

until [it had] risen

Could "subject + had" sequence be omitted in the following? If it's possible only in b, why can't the same happen to a? a. The soldiers remained in the room until they had witnessed the ...
Apollyon's user avatar
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0 votes
1 answer
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is it right that past participle adding object is considered to a sentence?

The below sentence makes me confused. is "Reorganized boxes in the attic" and "Rearranged his tools in the shed and moved the Saab's winter tire to a new place" correct complete ...
Limincao's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
60 views

Have done and have done or have done and done?

I would like to say that I have done multiple things together. Should I use "I have done sth1 and have done sth2" or should I omit the second "have" and say " I have done sth1 ...
ZH.Cheng's user avatar

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