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Participles used as adjectivesBoth present participles (ing) and past participles (ed) can be used as adjectives. But be careful not to confuse them. Present participle adjectives, tiring, boring, interesting, are active and mean ‘having this effect’. Past participle adjectives, tired, bored, interested, are passive and mean ‘affected in this way’. In other words, someone is -ed if something (or someone) is -ing. Or, if something is -ing, it makes you -ed. Jane is bored because her job is boring. Jane’s job is boring so Jane is bored. Other pairs of participle adjectives are: amusing amused exhausting exhausted amazing amazed frightening frightened annoying annoyed horrifying horrified confusing confused shocking shocked depressing depressed terrifying terrified exciting excited worrying worried 3. Position of adjectives: attributive and predicative use A. Adjectives in 1a-e come before their nouns: this book, each person, which B. Adjectives of quality, however, can be used either before their nouns, i.e. or after certain verbs, i.e. predicatively. These verbs are called link verbs.
They are: a) be, become, seem b) appear, feel, get/grow (=become), keep look (=appear), make, smell, But a problem with verbs in group b) is that when they are not used as Compare: She turned pale(adjective). (=She became pale) She turned angrily (adverb). The soup tasted strange. (adjective) He tasted that dish suspiciously. (adverb) C. Some adjectives can be used only attributively or only predicatively, and D. Adjectives: word order Sometimes we use several adjectives together. My aunt lives in a lovely small cottage. In the garden there was a beautiful large square wooden table. Adjectives like small/large/square/wooden are fact adjectives. They give us opinionfact a nice sunny day a beautiful large square wooden table Sometimes there are two or more fact adjectives. Usually (but not always) we 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 sizeageshapecolouroriginmaterialpurpose NOUN a tall young man big blue eyes a small black plastic bag a long brown wooden walking stick an old French clock
Adjectives of size and length (big/small/tall/short/long etc.) usually go be fore a large round table a tall thin girl a long narrow street
Date: 2015-12-11; view: 1054
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