B1 القواعد 1 min read سهل

-Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?

-Ed adjectives describe how a person FEELS. -Ing adjectives describe what causes that feeling.

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

Use -ed for how you feel, and -ing for the thing that causes that feeling.

  • Use -ed adjectives to describe a person's feelings: 'I am bored.'
  • Use -ing adjectives to describe the cause of the feeling: 'The movie is boring.'
  • Remember: -ed = internal state, -ing = external source.
Person + feel + -ed | Thing + cause + -ing

نظرة عامة

## The Simple Rule
-ed adjectives describe how a person feels.
-ing adjectives describe the thing or situation that causes the feeling.
| -ed (the feeling) | -ing (the cause) |
|---|---|
| I am bored. | This film is boring. |
| She is excited. | The news is exciting. |
| He is confused. | The question is confusing. |
| They are tired. | The journey was tiring. |
| We were surprised. | The result was surprising. |
## More Examples in Context
  • The lesson was interesting. (the lesson caused interest)
  • The students were interested in the topic. (the students felt interest)
  • She is a fascinating person. (she causes fascination)
  • I was fascinated by her story. (I felt fascination)
## Common Mistake
Saying -ing when you mean -ed about yourself:
  • I am very boring (= I cause boredom in other people)
  • I am very bored (= I feel boredom) -- this is what most people mean
## Common -Ed/-Ing Pairs
bored/boring, tired/tiring, excited/exciting, interested/interesting,
confused/confusing, surprised/surprising, disappointed/disappointing,
amused/amusing, frightened/frightening, relaxed/relaxing, shocked/shocking

Adjective Formation Table

Base Verb Feeling (-ed) Cause (-ing) Example (-ed) Example (-ing)
Bore
Bored
Boring
I am bored.
The book is boring.
Interest
Interested
Interesting
I am interested.
The topic is interesting.
Excite
Excited
Exciting
I am excited.
The news is exciting.
Tire
Tired
Tiring
I am tired.
The work is tiring.
Confuse
Confused
Confusing
I am confused.
The map is confusing.
Disappoint
Disappointed
Disappointing
I am disappointed.
The result is disappointing.

Meanings

These adjectives are derived from verbs to describe states or characteristics. -ed adjectives describe a person's emotional state, while -ing adjectives describe the quality of the thing causing that state.

1

Emotional State

Describing how someone feels.

“I am tired.”

“She is excited.”

2

Characteristic/Cause

Describing the source of an emotion.

“The book is tiring.”

“The news is exciting.”

Reference Table

Reference table for -Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting?
Form Structure Example
Affirmative
Subject + be + -ed/-ing
I am bored / It is boring.
Negative
Subject + be + not + -ed/-ing
I am not bored / It is not boring.
Question
Be + subject + -ed/-ing?
Are you bored? / Is it boring?
Short Answer
Yes/No, subject + be(not)
Yes, I am. / No, it isn't.
Noun Modifier
Adjective + Noun
An interested student / An interesting class.
Adverbial
Adverb + Adjective
Very bored / Quite boring.

طيف الرسمية

رسمي
I am highly interested in this subject.

I am highly interested in this subject. (Academic/Professional)

محايد
I am interested in this subject.

I am interested in this subject. (Academic/Professional)

غير رسمي
I'm into this.

I'm into this. (Academic/Professional)

عامية
I'm vibing with this.

I'm vibing with this. (Academic/Professional)

The Feeling vs. Cause Map

Verb

Person (Internal)

  • Bored Feeling

Thing (External)

  • Boring Cause

Adjective Comparison

Feeling (-ed)
Excited Emocionado
Cause (-ing)
Exciting Emocionante

Decision Flowchart

1

Are you describing a person's feeling?

YES
Use -ed
NO
Use -ing

Common Pairs

😊

Emotions

  • Bored/Boring
  • Interested/Interesting
  • Excited/Exciting
  • Tired/Tiring

أمثلة حسب المستوى

1

I am bored.

Estoy aburrido.

2

The game is boring.

El juego es aburrido.

3

I am tired.

Estoy cansado.

4

The work is tiring.

El trabajo es cansado.

1

Are you interested in music?

¿Estás interesado en la música?

2

The movie was interesting.

La película fue interesante.

3

She is excited for the trip.

Ella está emocionada por el viaje.

4

The news is exciting.

Las noticias son emocionantes.

1

I was confused by his explanation.

Estaba confundido por su explicación.

2

The instructions were very confusing.

Las instrucciones eran muy confusas.

3

He felt disappointed with the result.

Se sintió decepcionado con el resultado.

4

The results were disappointing.

Los resultados fueron decepcionantes.

1

I am fascinated by history.

Me fascina la historia.

2

The history lecture was fascinating.

La clase de historia fue fascinante.

3

They were exhausted after the hike.

Estaban agotados después de la caminata.

4

The hike was exhausting.

La caminata fue agotadora.

1

I was overwhelmed by the sheer volume of work.

Me sentí abrumado por el gran volumen de trabajo.

2

The workload is overwhelming.

La carga de trabajo es abrumadora.

3

She was terrified of the dark.

Ella tenía terror a la oscuridad.

4

The experience was terrifying.

La experiencia fue aterradora.

1

The audience was captivated by the performance.

La audiencia quedó cautivada por la actuación.

2

The performance was captivating.

La actuación fue cautivadora.

3

I am intrigued by the proposal.

Me intriga la propuesta.

4

The proposal is intriguing.

La propuesta es intrigante.

سهل الخلط

-Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting? مقابل Adjective vs. Adverb

Learners often use adjectives where they need adverbs.

-Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting? مقابل Present Participle vs. Gerund

Both end in -ing, but gerunds are nouns.

-Ed and -Ing Adjectives: Bored or Boring? Interested or Interesting? مقابل Past Participle as Adjective vs. Passive Voice

They look the same.

أخطاء شائعة

I am boring.

I am bored.

You are describing your feeling, not your personality.

The movie is bored.

The movie is boring.

A movie cannot feel emotions.

I am interest.

I am interested.

Need the -ed suffix for the adjective.

The book is interested.

The book is interesting.

The book causes interest, it doesn't feel it.

I feel boring.

I feel bored.

Use -ed for feelings.

The class is tired.

The class is tiring.

The class causes the feeling.

Are you excite?

Are you excited?

Need the -ed suffix.

The situation was confused.

The situation was confusing.

The situation causes the confusion.

I am surprising.

I am surprised.

You are the one feeling the surprise.

It was a bored day.

It was a boring day.

The day causes the boredom.

The results were disappointed.

The results were disappointing.

Results cause the disappointment.

I am overwhelming.

I am overwhelmed.

You are the recipient of the feeling.

The lecture was fascinated.

The lecture was fascinating.

The lecture causes the fascination.

أنماط الجُمل

I am ___ by the ___.

The ___ is very ___.

I feel ___ because the ___ is ___.

It is ___ to be ___ by the ___.

Real World Usage

Social Media constant

This game is so exciting!

Job Interview very common

I am very interested in this role.

Travel common

The map is confusing.

Food Delivery occasional

The wait is tiring.

Academic common

The lecture was fascinating.

Texting constant

I'm so bored lol.

💡

The Person Test

If the subject is a person feeling something, use -ed.
⚠️

Don't call people boring!

Unless you mean they are dull, use -ed for people.
🎯

Use adverbs

You can add 'very' or 'quite' to both forms.
💬

Casual speech

In casual speech, people often drop the 'I am' and just say 'Bored!'.

Smart Tips

Always use -ed.

I am boring. I am bored.

Always use -ing.

The movie was bored. The movie was boring.

Use -ed for yourself.

I am confusing. I am confused.

Use -ed for yourself.

I am exciting. I am excited.

النطق

/bɔːrd/ for bored

-ed ending

The -ed ending is pronounced /ɪd/, /t/, or /d/ depending on the verb.

/ˈbɔːrɪŋ/ for boring

-ing ending

The -ing ending is pronounced /ɪŋ/.

Statement

I am ↘bored.

Falling intonation for finality.

Question

Are you ↗bored?

Rising intonation for yes/no questions.

احفظها

وسيلة تذكّر

ED is for the HEAD (your feelings). ING is for the THING (the cause).

ربط بصري

Imagine a person with an 'ED' sticker on their forehead (feeling) and a giant 'ING' sign pointing at a boring movie screen.

Rhyme

If you feel it, use the ED, if it's the cause, use the ING.

Story

I was very bored (feeling) at the lecture. The lecture was so boring (cause) that I fell asleep. My friend was also tired (feeling) because the lecture was tiring (cause).

Word Web

BoredBoringInterestedInterestingExcitedExcitingTiredTiring

تحدٍّ

Write 3 sentences about your day using one -ed and one -ing adjective for each.

ملاحظات ثقافية

Very common to use these in casual conversation to express extreme states.

Similar usage, but often more understated.

Often uses these with intensifiers.

These adjectives come from Old English verb participles.

بدايات محادثة

What is the most interesting book you have read?

Are you ever bored on weekends?

What is the most confusing thing about learning English?

Have you ever been disappointed by a movie?

مواضيع للكتابة اليومية

Describe your favorite hobby.
Write about a day that made you feel tired.
Describe a time you were confused.
Reflect on a professional challenge.

أخطاء شائعة

Incorrect

صحيح


Incorrect

صحيح


Incorrect

صحيح


Incorrect

صحيح

Test Yourself

Fill in the blank.

I am so ___ (bore) with this movie.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: bored
You are describing your feeling.
Choose the correct word. اختيار متعدد

The lecture was very ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: interesting
The lecture causes interest.
Fix the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

I am boring because I have nothing to do.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I am bored
You are describing your feeling.
Reorder the words. Sentence Reorder

Arrange the words in the correct order:

All words placed

Click words above to build the sentence

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: the map is confusing
Standard adjective order.
Translate to English. الترجمة

Estoy emocionado.

Answer starts with: I a...

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I am excited
Feeling = -ed.
Match the feeling to the cause. Match Pairs

Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Boring
The cause of being bored is something boring.
Fill in the blank.

The news was ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: surprising
The news causes surprise.
Choose the correct word. اختيار متعدد

I was ___ by the results.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: disappointed
You are the recipient of the feeling.

Score: /8

تمارين تطبيقية

8 exercises
Fill in the blank.

I am so ___ (bore) with this movie.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: bored
You are describing your feeling.
Choose the correct word. اختيار متعدد

The lecture was very ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: interesting
The lecture causes interest.
Fix the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

I am boring because I have nothing to do.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I am bored
You are describing your feeling.
Reorder the words. Sentence Reorder

the / is / confusing / map

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: the map is confusing
Standard adjective order.
Translate to English. الترجمة

Estoy emocionado.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I am excited
Feeling = -ed.
Match the feeling to the cause. Match Pairs

Bored -> ?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Boring
The cause of being bored is something boring.
Fill in the blank.

The news was ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: surprising
The news causes surprise.
Choose the correct word. اختيار متعدد

I was ___ by the results.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: disappointed
You are the recipient of the feeling.

Score: /8

الأسئلة الشائعة (8)

No, things don't have feelings. Use -ing.

Yes, but it means the person causes the feeling (e.g., 'He is boring').

Some adjectives don't have both forms (e.g., 'happy').

Ask: Is it a feeling or a cause?

Yes, it describes a state of mind.

It means you are a dull person.

Yes, they are standard English.

Only verbs that express emotions or psychological states.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

Spanish partial

aburrido/aburrido

English requires two different forms.

French high

ennuyé/ennuyeux

Suffixes are different.

German high

gelangweilt/langweilig

German uses -ig for the cause.

Japanese low

taikutsu-na

Japanese doesn't use participle suffixes.

Arabic low

mumill

Arabic doesn't use -ed/-ing.

Chinese low

wúliáo

Chinese lacks morphological markers.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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