Question from Christy in the Philippines
When do we have to use the past participle of the verb when the tense of your statement is in the present tense. This is because I get confused when someone asks me about this. Like for ex. I think your headset is broken. I know this sentence is right, but why use past participle (broken). Thanks
Hi Christy, thanks for your question. English can be confusing and I think you’ve landed on one of the areas that is most confusing for a lot of English language learners. Let’s take a look at your example sentence:
* I think your headset is broken
Now what is that? Simple Present? Simple Past? Present Perfect? The sentence seems to be in the Present … but what is that past participle ‘broken’ doing in there?.Well, this sentence is in the Passive and that changes the way we structure the tenses.
We use the Passive form:
* when the agent (the persons or thing performing the action) is known or is not important.In the following sentence we are not concerned about WHO is producing the Champagne.
* E.G. Champagne is produced in France.
* to focus attention on the result of an action. This fits your sentence where the important thing to focus on is not WHO broke the headset or WHY the headset is broken but the fact that it IS broken:
* E.G. I think your headset is broken
* to hide the identity of the person performing the action. The writer or speaker is being tactful, secretive or evasive.
* E.G. The new building was built using sub-standard materials.
* to keep the same grammatical subject.
* E.G. Michael won the chess game with Jane but was beaten by Max in the finals.
Now, how do we make a sentence Passive? Let’s have a look at how we re-organize the tense structure (table taken from the English4Today English Grammar). Try and change these Passive examples into active sentences. I’ll do the first one for you:
* Passive: The house is cleaned every day.Active: I clean the house every day.
Remember, the Passive uses the:
SUBJECT + TO BE + PAST PARTICIPLE
Subject
verb ‘to be’
past participle
Simple present:
The house
is
cleaned every day.
Present continuous:
The house
is being
cleaned at the moment.
Simple past:
The house
was
cleaned yesterday.
Past continuous:
The house
was being
cleaned last week.
Present perfect:
The house
has been
cleaned since you left.
Past perfect:
The house
had been
cleaned before their arrival.
Future:
The house
will be
cleaned next week.
Future continuous:
The house
will be being
cleaned tomorrow.
Present conditional:
The house
would be
cleaned if they had visitors.