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Cup cake Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Always drawn

Hi Everyone,

I would like to know if the term - always drawn - is just the past participle and not related to the simple past in the following sentence:

' Even though I could see the accident was horrific, I'm nevertheless always drawn to drama.'


I know that drew is the simple past, so to me, the term 's/he is always drawn' is nothing more than a participle issue. Is there anything more to it though?


Thanks,

CC Emotion: smile



  

Top answer

com/dictionary/english/draw As a confessed racing fanatic I am normally drawn to the exotic, performance cars.

  • com/dictionary/english/draw As a confessed racing fanatic I am normally drawn to the exotic, performance cars.
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1 Answers
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"drawn to" means "strongly attracted to." See entry #22:

https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/draw

As a confessed racing fanatic I am normally drawn to the exotic, performance cars.

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