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I came across online the following sentence "A new CEO has been hired who will transform the company by decentralizing authority to various division heads while increasing their accountability through the use of public scorecards."
In this sentence I know we are using perfect present tense "has been" but I am not sure what type of word is "hired" used here. In my mind I assume it is a verb, but can a verb follow a perfect present tense verb structure?
My second question is regarding present participle after a verb of motion such as: He lay looking up at the clouds. She came running towards me. In these two examples are "looking and running" gerunds? If not what type of word are these present participles?
Thank you, Kenny
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I came across online the following sentence "A new CEO has been hired who will transform the company by decentralizing authority to various division heads while increasing their accountability through the use of public scorecards."
In this sentence I know we are using perfect present tense "has been" but I am not sure what type of word is "hired" used here. In my mind I assume it is a verb, but can a verb follow a perfect present tense verb structure?
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hired is a past participle.
Active voice: X has hired Y.
Passive voice: Y has been hired.
The grammatical role of hired remains the same in both sentences: past participle.
Quote:
My second question is regarding present participle after a verb of motion such as: He lay looking up at the clouds. She came running towards me. In these two examples are "looking and running" gerunds? If not what type of word are these present participles?
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Correct.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Where to now? Join ongoing discussions on thousands of quality questions in our Verbal Questions Forum
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.