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ESL forum > Grammar and Linguistics > Passive Voice or Adjective?    

Passive Voice or Adjective?



Canankiran
France

Passive Voice or Adjective?
 
Hi guys, long time no see. I have an advanced grammar question:

If painters or sculptors with potential talent are subsidised to live in great centres of culture like Venice or Paris, why shouldn �t promising pop stars be subsidised to sip from the industry �s founts in Los Angeles or London?


In this sentence, are �are subsidised � and �be subsidised �  used as part of passive structured verbs? or are they adjectives? and how on earth can I prove it?

Thanks.

5 Apr 2014      





MissAndreaP
Argentina

sub‧si‧dize also subsidise British English [transitive usually passive]
if a government or organization subsidizes a company, activity etc, it pays part of its costs:
Farming is heavily subsidized (=subsidized a lot) by the government.
�subsidized adjective [only before noun]
heavily subsidized agricultural exports
�subsidization noun [uncountable]

Adjectives come before a noun. "to be subsidised" is a verb phrase in the passive form and note that the agent of the action can be indicated  by a prepositional phrase beginning with "by..."

5 Apr 2014     



Zora
Canada

The sentences are grammatically correct. However, you are not using subsidize correctly.

Subsidize is when a government pays/incurs part of the price of something so that it is cheaper to buy/grow/manufacture. 

I think the phrase you want is:

If painters or sculptors with potential talent are given scholarships/grants to live in great centres of culture like Venice or Paris, why shouldn �t promising pop stars be given scholarships/grants to sip from the industry �s founts in Los Angeles or London? 

5 Apr 2014     



cunliffe
United Kingdom

To add to MissAnreaP �s answer, �Subsidised students, living in centres of culture... � that is adjectival.

These examples are verb phrases - the active would be �the government/industry/whatever  subsidises them. � �they are subsidised by � - this is passive voice - the present passive. 

Any grammarians around? I think there could be a better explanation! 

6 Apr 2014     



florimago
Spain

I completely agree with cunliffe �s explanation !!!

6 Apr 2014     



Canankiran
France

Thank you for your answers everyone. As far as I know there are a couple of tests to see whether the structure is adjective or verb. For adjectival use: inserting �very �, inserting the prefix �-un �, and changing the copula �be � to another one like get, seem, or remain etc. For verbal use: (as it is mentioned at the above in comments) to make it active.
So I came up with this explanation:

Very: *If painters or sculptors with potential talent are very subsidised to live� The sentence loses its grammaticality when very is inserted.

�un: *If painters or sculptors with potential talent are unsubsidised to live� The prefix �un also makes the sentence ungrammatical.

Copula: *If painters or sculptors with potential talent remain/seem subsidised to live� As it can be seen the sentence also fails the copula test.

Active: If the agent subsidises the painters or sculptors with potential talent to live� It can be turned into an active sentence, so it is proven to be a passive structure. 

Am I right?


6 Apr 2014