Participial Adjectives (-ed vs -ing) (Japanese Translation)
(JA) Participial adjectives are formed from verbs. TOEIC frequently tests the distinction between adjectives ending in -ed (describing feelings) and -ing (describing the cause of the feeling).
Rules
- (JA) Use -ed adjectives to describe how someone feels (e.g., I am interested).
- (JA) Use -ing adjectives to describe the thing or person that causes the feeling (e.g., The book is interesting).
- (JA) Use -ing for active meaning and -ed for passive meaning when modifying nouns.
Examples
"The board members were disappointed with the quarterly results."
(JA) The -ed form 'disappointed' describes the feelings of the board members.
"The CEO gave an inspiring speech at the annual conference."
(JA) The -ing form 'inspiring' describes the speech, which caused the feeling.
"Please review the attached document before the meeting."
(JA) The -ed form 'attached' describes the document in a passive sense (it was attached).
What TOEIC specifically tests
- (JA) Using an -ed adjective to describe a non-living thing (e.g., 'the bored meeting').
- (JA) Using an -ing adjective to describe a person's feeling (e.g., 'I am boring').
- (JA) Confusing verbs and adjectives (e.g., 'interest' vs 'interested').
Common questions
(JA) Can an -ing adjective describe a person?
(JA) Yes, if the person is the cause of the feeling. For example, 'He is a boring speaker' means he causes others to feel bored.
(JA) How are participial adjectives tested?
(JA) TOEIC will provide both the -ed and -ing forms of a word in the choices. You must determine if the noun being modified is the experiencer (-ed) or the cause (-ing).
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