
Business vocabulary

em 04 de Dezembro de 2019
What is a Participle?
What is a participle? A participle is a verbal that is used as an adjective and most often ends in -ing or -ed. They function as adjectives, thus participles modify nouns or pronouns.
There are two participles: The present participle and the past participle. They can both be used as adjectives.
The Present participle, always ending in -ing
A crying baby
The smiling girl is my sister.
The past participles of all regular verbs end in -ed. For example:
Harry has worked in this company for 5 years
Irregular verbs, however, have various past participle endings – for instance, thrown, ridden, built, and gone
Present ParticiplePresent participle, always ending in -ing, is created from the form of a verb used with the verb to be (am, is, are, was, were, been) as an auxiliary verb (progressive tense).
The Present participle is used:
They are playing football at the moment.
He is reading a book.
A crying baby
The smiling girl is my sister.
Mary is interested in reading books.
I saw them crossing the street.
I could hear them playing in the garden.
Don’t waste time playing computer games!
I’ve spent the whole weekend revisingfor my exam.
(With catch, the participle always refers to an action which causes annoyance or anger. This is not the case with find, which is unemotional.)
Don’t let him catch you reading his letters.
I found him sitting on a park bench reading a book.
He left the room laughing.
NOTE: You may be thinking that present participles look just like gerunds because they are verbs ending in -ing, but the big difference is that gerunds are used like nouns, while present participles are used as adjectives to modify nouns or pronouns.
Past ParticipleThe past participles of all regular verbs end in -ed. Irregular verbs, however, have various past participle endings – for instance, thrown, ridden, built, and gone.
The Past Participle is used:
A broken vase
Spoken words cannot be revoked.
Harry has worked in this company for 5 years.
When I came, he had left.
This house was built in 1815.
The book was given to me.
The police could have charged them with threatening behaviour.
I should have finished by the middle of the week.
She entered, accompanied by her daughters.
I want this text translated by noon.
He made his presence felt.
Present Participle vs. Past Participle
Learn the differences between present participle and past participle with examples.
He found the house burning.
The past participle has a passive meaning:
He found the house burned.
The past participle is active in such examples:
A retired teacher
The fallen angels
An escaped prisoner.
He opens the door and looks inside → Opening the door, he looks inside.
The past participle is used to replace constructions of the type “subject+passive verb”:
She entered and she was accompanied by her daughters → She entered, accompanied by her daughters.
The present participle is used if the absolute phrase is active:
The weather being fine, nobody wanted to stay at home.
The past participle is used if the absolute construction is passive:
All things considered,/This done, I think we should start immediately.