0
Jigneshbharati Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Prepared

There was no news and we were prepared for the worst. I saw this sentence in Longman dictionary. How do we confirm whether "prepared" is an adjective or passive? Is there a trick to decide whether the past participle is adjective or passive?
  

Top answer

Jigneshbharati How do we confirm whether "prepared" is an adjective or passive? By the sense of it. A passive construction requires an agent, and no one prepared them for anything.

  • Jigneshbharati How do we confirm whether "prepared" is an adjective or passive?
  • By the sense of it.
  • A passive construction requires an agent, and no one prepared them for anything.
  • They were in a state of preparedness.
  • Jigneshbharati Is there a trick to decide whether the past participle is adjective or passive?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
JigneshbharatiHow do we confirm whether "prepared" is an adjective or passive?

By the sense of it. A passive construction requires an agent, and no one prepared them for anything. They were in a state of preparedness.

JigneshbharatiIs there a trick to decide whether the past participle is adjective or passive?

Only

0
JigneshbharatiIs there a trick to decide whether the past participle is adjective or passive?

No, there is no trick, but there are a few basic principles that you can follow to guide you in the right direction.

See

Jigneshbharatiwe were prepared for the worst

Did someone prepare us? Probably not. So probab

Related Questions