🔁 Bringing It All Together — -ed vs -ing Adjectives
A clear, theory-rich but friendly lesson for adult learners (CEFR B). Learn how to choose between -ed and -ing, see real-life examples, and practise with classroom-ready prompts.
💬 Introduction
Many students mix -ed and -ing adjectives. The difference is small but important:
-ed = how someone feels; -ing = what causes the feeling.
This lesson gives you the grammar (theory), clear examples from everyday life, common mistakes, and practical activities to practice in class or at home.
📚 Core Rules (Theory)
Use -ed when you describe the person (or animal) who feels something: I am tired, She was surprised.
Use -ing when the noun is the cause of an emotion: The lecture was tiring, The news was shocking.
-ing.⚖️ Side-by-side: -ed vs -ing
📌 Examples in Everyday Context (Mexico-friendly)
- The meeting was tiring. → We were tired after the meeting.
- The deadline is stressful. → I feel stressed.
- The kids are excited about the trip. (feeling)
- The trip is exciting. (cause)
- The beach was relaxing. → We felt relaxed.
- The documentary was interesting. → I felt interested.
🔍 Common Pairs — Quick Reference
🚫 Common Mistakes & How to Fix Them
- Wrong: “I am interesting.” → Fix: “I am interested.” (you feel the interest)
- Wrong: “The book is bored.” → Fix: “The book is boring.” (the book causes boredom)
- Wrong: “I am exciting.” → Fix: “I am excited.” (you feel excited)
-ed. If the answer is a thing/event → use -ing.🧠 Grammar Detail (Theory)
Linguistically, many -ed and -ing adjectives come from past participles and present participles respectively. Their difference is a voice distinction:
-ed(past participle used adjectivally) — denotes an experiencer or patient of an action: affected by external cause. Example: shocked (having been shocked).-ing(present participle used adjectivally) — denotes an active property of the noun: causing or producing the effect. Example: shocking (producing shock).
This distinction explains many patterns and predicts usage: when the adjective describes a temporary emotional state (patient role), expect -ed. When it describes an active property of a noun (agentive role), expect -ing.
✍️ Practice
- The movie was ________. (cause)
- I was ________ by the movie. (feeling)
- The lecture felt ________. (cause)
- She looked ________ after the meeting. (feeling)
✅ Quick Summary — Remember
- -ed = the person who feels (I am bored).
- -ing = the thing or situation that causes the feeling (The movie is boring).
- Ask: “Who feels it?” → use
-ed. “What causes it?” → use-ing. - For advanced clarity: think in terms of patient (ed) vs agentive property (ing).
