Definition:
A participle is a non-finite verb form that can function as an adjective (modifying a noun) or combine with auxiliary verbs to form compound tenses. English has two participle types: the present participle (-ing: “running,” “eating”) and the past participle (-ed/-en/irregular: “broken,” “eaten,” “walked”). Participles look like verbs but behave like adjectives or verb phrase components.
In-Depth Explanation
| Participle Type | Form | Adjective Use | Compound Tense Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present (-ing) | running, burning, interesting | “the running water” | “She is running” (progressive) |
| Past (-ed/-en) | broken, burned, interested | “the broken vase” | “She has broken it” (perfect) |
The present participle and gerund are identical in form (-ing) but serve different functions:
- Participle: adjective or verb component (“the sleeping cat,” “she is sleeping”)
- Gerund: noun (“Sleeping is important”)
Participle equivalents in Japanese:
Japanese doesn’t have participles in the English sense, but uses several strategies for the same functions:
Adjectival modification (relative clauses):
- English: “the broken window” (past participle as adjective)
- Japanese: 壊れた窓 (kowareta mado) — the past tense form of the verb directly modifies the noun (prenominal modification)
- English: “the running child” (present participle as adjective)
- Japanese: 走っている子供 (hashitte iru kodomo) — the progressive form modifies the noun
Japanese handles this through verb-modifying-noun word order (modifier before noun), using regular verb forms rather than a special participle morphology. This is actually simpler than English in some ways — any Japanese verb in any tense/aspect form can modify a noun by simply placing it before the noun.
For Japanese learners of English, the participial adjective system requires learning:
- Which words are present participles vs. past participles when used as adjectives
- The -ing vs. -ed adjective contrast: “interesting” (the thing causes interest) vs. “interested” (the person feels interest) — a notoriously difficult distinction
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Huddleston, R., & Pullum, G. K. (2002). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge University Press. — Comprehensive treatment of English participles and their syntactic functions.