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Grammar

-ing and -ed Clauses (a woman talking…, the boy injured…)

Using participle clauses to describe people and things without a full relative clause

What Are Participle Clauses?

A clause is a piece of a sentence. Instead of using a full relative clause with who or which, you can shorten it with an -ing or -ed form. This is common in written English and in formal business communication.

Full relative clauseShortened participle clause
The manager who is handling the complaint…The manager handling the complaint…
The report that was submitted last week…The report submitted last week…

-ing Clauses (Active Meaning)

Use an -ing clause to say what someone or something is doing (or was doing) at a particular time. The -ing clause replaces a relative clause with an active verb.

  • Do you know the woman presenting the quarterly results? (= the woman who is presenting)
  • The team working on the merger needs more time. (= the team that is working)
  • I got a call from a client complaining about late delivery. (= a client who was complaining)

You can also use an -ing clause for something that happens all the time, not just at one moment.

  • The road connecting the two offices is always jammed at 8 a.m. (= the road that connects)
  • We need a system handling at least 10,000 requests per second. (= a system that handles)
  • Is there a train leaving before 7 a.m.? (= a train that leaves)

-ed Clauses (Passive Meaning)

An -ed clause has a passive meaning. The past participle replaces a relative clause with a passive verb.

  • The goods damaged during shipping have been replaced. (= goods that were damaged)
  • Most of the candidates invited to the interview showed up on time. (= candidates who were invited)
  • The budget approved by the board includes a training allowance. (= the budget that was approved)

Many past participles are irregular — they do not end in -ed.

Regular (-ed)Irregular
damaged, invited, approvedstolen, built, written, made, sent
  • The software built by our in-house team runs faster than the old one. (= software that was built)
  • The figures sent to the client contained an error. (= figures that were sent)

there is / there was + Participle Clause

You can use there is / there was (etc.) with both -ing and -ed clauses.

  • There’s a courier waiting for you at reception. (-ing, active)
  • Is there anybody working late tonight? (-ing, active)
  • There were several items listed incorrectly on the invoice. (-ed, passive)

The word left is often used this way, meaning “remaining” or “still available.”

  • We’ve used almost all the budget. There’s very little left. (= still remaining)
  • There are only two seats left on the morning flight.

How to Choose: -ing or -ed?

The choice depends on whether the noun does the action or receives the action.

The noun…UseExample
does the action-ing clauseThe employee handling the case… (the employee handles)
receives the action-ed clauseThe case handled by our team… (the case was handled)

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

The consultant _____ our department has 20 years of experience.

Select your answer:

Question 2

Most of the products _____ in this factory are exported to Asia.

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Question 3

There were several employees _____ for the elevator when the fire alarm went off.

Select your answer:

Question 4

The email _____ to all staff contained incorrect dates.

Select your answer:

Question 5

We have used nearly all the paper. There are only a few sheets _____.

Select your answer:

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