Past Participle: Definition and Examples (2024)

by Craig Shrives

This Page Includes...

  • Video Past Participle: Definition and Examples (2)
  • Past Participle: Definition and Examples (3)
  • Why Past Participles Are Important Past Participle: Definition and Examples (4)
  • Key Points Past Participle: Definition and Examples (5)

What Are Past Participles? (with Examples)

A past participle is a word with the following three traits:

  • It is formed from a verb.
  • It is used as an adjective or to form verb tense.
  • It probably ends "-ed," "-d," "-t," "-en," or "-n."

For example:

Past Participle: Definition and Examples (6)

A Closer Look at a Past Participle

Let's look at the past participle of the verb to whisper:

  • Here's the past participle: whispered
    • Here it is used as an adjective: The whispered word
    • Here it is used to form a verb tense: She had whispered him the answer.

Examples of Past Participles Being Used As Adjectives

Here are some more examples of past participles (shaded) being used as adjectives:

The VerbThe Past Participle
To swellswollen eyes
To breakbroken plate
To ruinruined cake

Examples of Past Participles Used as Adjectives in Sentences

Here are some examples of past participles being used as adjectives in sentences:

  • Here is a laminated copy to replace your torn one.
  • Stuffed deer heads on walls are bad enough, but it's worse when they have streamers in their antlers because then you know they were enjoying themselves when they were shot. (TV host Ellen DeGeneres)
  • A torn jacket is soon mended, but hard words bruise the heart of a child. (Poet Henry Longfellow)
  • Scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. (Poet Oscar Wilde)
  • The enemy is anybody who's going to get you killed, no matter which side he's on. (Author Joseph Heller)

Past Participles in Participle Phrases

Past participles can often be found in participle phrases. A participle phrase acts like an adjective. In the examples below, the participle phrases are shaded and the past participles are in bold:

  • The boy taken to hospital has recovered.
  • (The participle phrase "taken to hospital" describes "the boy.")
  • I have a heart wracked with sorrow.
  • (The participle phrase "wracked with sorrow" describes "a heart.")
  • Battered by the wind, John fell to his knees.
  • (The participle phrase ""Battered by the wind" describes "john.")
  • Finally broken , Lee lowered his gloves.
  • (The participle phrase "Finally broken" describes "Lee.")

Read more about participle phrases.

Past Participles Used in Verb Tenses

As well as being used as adjectives, past participles are also used to form verb tenses. Here are the verb tenses (past participles shaded):

The 4 Past TensesExample
simple past tenseI broke
past progressive tenseI was breaking
past perfect tenseI had broken
past perfect progressive tenseI had been breaking
The 4 Present TensesExample
simple present tenseI break
present progressive tenseI am breaking
present perfect tenseI have broken
present perfect progressive tenseI have been breaking
The 4 Future TensesExample
simple future tenseI will break
futureprogressive tenseI will be breaking
futureperfect tenseI willhave broken
future perfect progressive tenseI willhave been breaking

Examples of Past Participles Used in Verb Tenses in Sentences

Here are some example sentences with past participles being used for verb tense:

  • I had crossed the line. I was free, but there was no one to welcome me to the land of freedom. I was a stranger in a strange land. (Political activist Harriet Tubman)
  • I had seen birth and death but had thought they were different. (Poet T S Eliot)
  • I phoned my dad to tell him I had stopped smoking. He called me a quitter.
  • Don't take the wrong side of an argument just because your opponent has taken the right side.
  • Poets have been mysteriously silent on the subject of cheese.
  • Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember, and remember more than I have seen. (British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli)
  • I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me.
  • By September, Jenny will have taken over that role.
  • I hope that, when I leave this planet, I will have touched a few people in a positive way. (Actor Will Rothhaar)

Forming the Past Participle (Regular Verbs)

If it's a regular verb, the past participle is the same as the simple past tense. In other words, it is formed like this:

Add "ed" to most verbs:

  • jump > jumped
  • paint > painted

If a verb of one syllable ends [consonant-vowel-consonant], double the final consonant and add "ed":

  • chat > chatted
  • stop > stopped

If the final consonant is "w," "x," or "y," don't double it:

  • sew > sewed
  • play > played
  • fix > fixed

If last syllable of a longer verb is stressed and ends [consonant-vowel-consonant], double the last consonant and add "ed":

  • incur > incurred
  • prefer > preferred

If the first syllable of a longer verb is stressed and the verb ends [consonant-vowel-consonant], just add "ed":

  • open > opened
  • enter > entered
  • swallow > swallowed

If the verb ends "e," just add "d":

  • thrive > thrived
  • guzzle > guzzled

If the verb ends [consonant + "y"], change the "y" to an "i" and add "ed":

  • cry > cried
  • fry > fried

Forming the Past Participle (Irregular Verbs)

If it's an irregular verb, the past participle is formed in all sorts of different ways. Here are some examples:

  • arise > arisen
  • catch > caught
  • choose > chosen
  • know > known

You just have to learn them.Read more about irregular verbs (includes a list of the most common irregular verbs).

More about Participles

There are two types of participles:

  • The Past Participle
  • (Past participles usually end with "-ed," "-d," "-t," "-en," or "-n.")
  • The Present Participle
  • (All present participles end with "-ing.")

Participles are non-finite verbs. (A non-finite verb is a verb that, by itself, does not show tense. This means if you look at just a participle, you cannot tell if you're dealing with the past tense, present tense, or future tense.)

Why Past Participles Are Important

If you're learning or teaching English, then it is essential to have a good understanding of participles (past participles and present participles) because adjectives and verb tenses are fundamental building blocks when learning a language...any language.

As a rule, native speakers are good at using participles, i.e., they do not cause too many writing errors. However, the same cannot be said for participle phrases, which are responsible for an error called a misplaced modifier. (It's not all bad news with participle phrases. They also offer a benefit.)

Here is one benefit and two writing "traps" associated with past participles:

(Benefit 1) Use a fronted participle phrase to say two things about your subject efficiently.

A participle can be used to create a sentence structure that allows you to say two or more things about your subject efficiently. For example:

  • Imbued with both common sense and enthusiasm, Patrick is always quick to find a cost-effective solution.
  • (This example features a past participle (bold) in a participle phrase (shaded).)

This structure is particularly useful when writing staff appraisals. It allows the writer to shoehorn in an extra observation about the subject in a single sentence.Read more about the benefits of using participles on the "non-finite verbs" page.

(Trap 1) Beware misplaced modifiers and dangling modifiers!

When using the sentence structure in "Benefit 1," writers must be careful not to write an ambiguous sentence by failing to put the participle phrase next to the word it's modifying. For example:

  • Imbued with both common sense and enthusiasm, senior managers routinely praise Patrick for his ability to find a cost-effective solution. Past Participle: Definition and Examples (7)
  • (In this example, the participle phrase (shaded) could be modifying "senior managers" instead of "Patrick." This is called a misplaced modifier.)

A misplaced modifier makes your sentence ambiguous or wrong. You can avoid a misplaced modifier by placing your modifier next to whatever it's modifying. Let's fix the example.

  • Imbued with both common sense and enthusiasm, Patrick routinely receives praise from senior managers for his ability to find a cost-effective solution. Past Participle: Definition and Examples (8)
  • (The participle phrase is now next to "Patrick." The ambiguity has gone.)

Occasionally, writers create a mistake known as a dangling modifier. With a dangling modifier, the word being modified isn't present in the sentence. For example:

  • Imbued with both common sense and enthusiasm, senior managers routinely offer praise for his ability to find a cost-effective solution. Past Participle: Definition and Examples (9)
  • (In this example, the participle phrase (shaded) has nothing to modify. "Patrick" isn't even mentioned. This is called a dangling modifier.)

Read more about misplaced modifiers.Read more about dangling modifiers.

Key Points

  • Past and present participles are key building blocks in any language.
  • Using an upfront participle phrase lets you shoehorn more information into a sentence.
  • If you use an upfront participle phrase, put the word being modified next.

Video Lesson

Here is a video summarizing this lesson past participles.

Take a different test on past participles.

Printable and Sendable Test

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See Also

verbs for kidsWhat are present participles?What are participle phrases?What are adjective phrases?What are verbs?What are verb tenses?Try a test on verb tenses.What are gerunds?

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Past Participle: Definition and Examples (2024)

FAQs

Past Participle: Definition and Examples? ›

: a word that expresses completed action and is one of the principal parts of a verb The words "raised" in "many hands were raised" and "thrown" in "the ball has been thrown" are past participles.

How do you explain past participle? ›

In English grammar, the past participle refers to an action that was started and completed entirely in the past. It is the third principal part of a verb, created by adding -ed, -d, or -t to the base form of a regular verb.

What's a participle example? ›

: a form of a verb that is used to indicate a past or ongoing action and that can be used like an adjective The word "smiling" in "the smiling child" is a participle.

Where is past participle used? ›

“Past participle” is defined by the Oxford Dictionary as “the form of a verb, typically ending in -ed in English, which is used in forming perfect and passive tenses and sometimes as an adjective.” This means that verbs in the past participle form usually end in the letters “ed.” For example, the word “talked.”

What are the 3 forms of past participle? ›

The three forms of the past participle are the regular, the irregular, and the adjective. The regular form of the past participle ends in -ed, demonstrating a past action. The irregular form of the past participle includes the word has' and puts the verb into its past tense form, also demonstrating a past action.

Has have past participle examples? ›

I have + (past participle)
  • Listen to the Entire Lesson.
  • "I have done it."
  • "I have heard that before."
  • "I have driven a car."
  • "I have forgotten the words."
  • "I have read that book."
  • "I have eaten at that restaurant before."
  • "I have flown in an airplane."

What is difference between past and past participle? ›

The main difference between past tense and past participle is that past tense is used to mention an action or state of being that has completely happened in the past, whereas past participle is a form of verb that is used in past, present, and future perfect tenses.

Which form of verb is past participle? ›

In a regular verb, the past participle is formed by adding "-ed". However, there are many irregular verbs in English, and these past participle forms must be memorized.

What are the 4 participles? ›

RULE 1: Latin has only four participles: the present active, future active, perfect passive and future passive.

Why is it called participle? ›

The word participle comes from classical Latin participium, from particeps 'sharing, participation', because it shares certain properties of verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. The Latin grammatical term is a calque of the Greek grammatical term μετοχή 'participation, participle'.

What are the types of participle? ›

There are two types of participles: present participles and past participles. Present participles end in –ing, while past participles end in –ed, -en, -d, -t, or –n.

How do you teach past participles? ›

In the case of 'teach', its past simple and past participle form is 'taught' (pronounced TOT, barely).

What is the difference between a present participle and a past participle? ›

There are two types of participles: present participles and past participles. Present participles end in –ing, while past participles end in –ed, -en, -d, -t, or –n. A present participle is the –ing form of a verb when it is used as an adjective.

Which form of verb is past participle? ›

In a regular verb, the past participle is formed by adding "-ed". However, there are many irregular verbs in English, and these past participle forms must be memorized.

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