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Anonymous Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Wrought

the devastation wrought by the violent storm

Is wrought a verb or adjective in the wording above?

  

Top answer

wrought is an old past participle of the verb work or of the verb wreak , depending which dictionary you consult. I don't see how it could be an adjective in the given example except insofar as past participles can modify. There are certainly no forms wroughter or wroughtest , which we might expect of an adjective.

  • wrought is an old past participle of the verb work or of the verb wreak , depending which dictionary you consult.
  • I don't see how it could be an adjective in the given example except insofar as past participles can modify.
  • There are certainly no forms wroughter or wroughtest , which we might expect of an adjective.
  • CJ
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2 Answers
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wrought is an old past participle of the verb work or of the verb wreak, depending which dictionary you consult.

I don't see how it could be an adjective in the given example except insofar as past participles can modify. There are certainly no forms wroughter or wroughtest, which we might expect of an adjective.

CJ

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anonymousIs wrought a verb or adjective in the wording above?

The old grammar does not handle these well. "Wrought by the violent storm" is an adjectival participial clause. Things get dicey when you try to parse it finer than that. "Wrought" is a verb form, obviously, and it can't be adjectival all by itself in your phrase, but it does not really have an e

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