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Ciples: By: Ethan, Tali, Elana, and Steven

This document discusses participles and participle phrases. It defines a participle as a verb form that functions as an adjective. There are two types of participles: present participles ending in "-ing" and past participles ending in "-ed", "-t", or "-en". Participle phrases consist of a participle and related words that act together as an adjective to describe a noun. The document provides examples of participles and participle phrases.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views

Ciples: By: Ethan, Tali, Elana, and Steven

This document discusses participles and participle phrases. It defines a participle as a verb form that functions as an adjective. There are two types of participles: present participles ending in "-ing" and past participles ending in "-ed", "-t", or "-en". Participle phrases consist of a participle and related words that act together as an adjective to describe a noun. The document provides examples of participles and participle phrases.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Participles

By: Ethan, Tali,


Elana, and Steven
The sliding cat crashed into the cans.
What is a participle?
• A participle is a form of a verb that
functions as an adjective.
• Ex. The petite youngster consumed a
crumbling kugle piece.
• Crumbling is the participle because it
is a verb describing a noun- kugle.
Types of participles

 There are two kinds of participles:


present participles and past participles.
 Present participles end in -ing
 Ex. leaping, blazing, withering
 Past participles end in: -ed, -t, or –en
 Ex. Pumped, burnt, broken
Huh?
 DON’T CONFUSE PARTICIPLES AND
VERBS!
 Participles AREN’T preceded by
helping verbs.
 Ex. The sputtering sedan wrenched
down the boulevard. (participle)
 The sedan was sputtering down the
boulevard. (verb)
The girl, eating the chocolate buttery
croissant, got a stomach ache.
Participle Phrases

• Participle phrases consist of a


participle and its related words. The
whole kit and caboodle acts as an
adjective.

• Ex. The girl, eating the chocolate


buttery croissant, got a stomach
ache.
• The participle phrase (red) is
describing the noun or pronoun.
Across
1. My sister, eating her
breakfast, talked with
her mouth full.
5. The running boy
tripped and fell.
Down
2. The talking girl
would not stop talking.
3. Flying cats ruled the
ancient city.
4. Harry, the jumping
bunny, jumped all the
way home!

Find the participles in the sentences and


fill them in the correct blanks

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