A past participle is the form of a verb ending in –ed,
-en, -d, -t, or –n when used as an adjective. Some ex-
amples of these types of verbs are: opened, beaten,
baked, burnt, and chosen.
She crawled out the opened window to escape the fire.
Here, opened is used as an adjective to describe window.
The recipe calls for three beaten eggs.
Here, beaten is used as an adjective to describe eggs.
One of my favorite foods is baked lasagna.
Here, baked is used as an adjective to describe the lasagna.
The smell of the burnt toast filled the room.
Here, burnt is used as an adjective to describe toast.
Margaret loved her chosen career as a kindergarten teacher.
Here, chosen is used as an adjective to describe career.
A participial phrase is a group of words that begins with a participle and in-
cludes objects or modifiers. Participial phrases are dependent clauses and are
used as adjectives to describe nouns or pronouns.
Having been an athlete, Jenny knew that training took a lot of determination.
Here, having been an athlete is a participial phrase that describes Jenny.
He noticed the girls running to the car to avoid the rain.
Here, running to the car is a participial phrase that describes the girls.
A participial phrase must be placed as close to the noun it modifies as possible
in order to avoid possible confusion.
Leaping through the woods, his foot landed in a huge puddle of mud.
Leaping through the woods, Josh landed his foot in a huge puddle of mud.
In the first sentence, the subject is not clear because it does not clearly state who is performing the action ex-
pressed in the participle leaping. This is called a misplaced modifier. The word foot cannot be the subject
because it cannot leap. The second sentence is clearer because a person must be doing the leaping and this
sentence names the person as Josh.
Note: For information on how to punctuate participial phrases, refer to the skills pages on
Commas (Non-essential and Essential Clauses) and Dependent Clauses.
Last modified 8/11/11