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A participle is a type of verbal—a verb form that looks like a verb but does not act as the verb in a sentence.
A participle acts as an adjective to modify a noun or pronoun.
Present participles end in -ing:
Past participles of regular verbs end in -ed:
Past participles of irregular verbs end in -en, -n, -t or various other endings:
Note: A participle can act as a verb if it is joined with a helping (or auxiliary) verb to form a verb phrase: is reading, had hoped, have gone. But by itself, the participle acts as an adjective.
A participle phrase is a participle with attached words. Because a participle is formed from a verb, it retains some of the properties of a verb, so it can take an object:
Like a verb, a participle can also be modified by an adverb or a prepositional phrase:
A participle with one or more objects or modifiers forms a participle phrase. In the examples above, hearing the shouts and drifting deeply over the fields are participle phrases.
In the examples below, the present and past participle phrases modify the words in bold font:
We can put a participle into the past to show action that occurred before another action:
Also, a participle can be used in the passive voice:
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