Ed ing — The difference — English Reservoir
www.englishreservoir.com › adjectives › ed-ingWe use the –ed adjective suffix when we want to show that the noun (person or thing) being described is affected. Remember, adjectives describe nouns, so the entity which is affected has to be a noun (either a person or a thing). For example, “James is tired today”. The adjective “tired” takes the –ed ending because the noun “James” is affected. “James” is the person “affected” because he feels tired.
Adjective with -ed / -ing - Trussel
www.trussel.com › eding-ed-ing noun; You ____ me! I'm _____! How _____! What _____! aggravate: aggravated: aggravating: aggravation: alarm: alarmed: alarming: alarm: annoy: annoyed: annoying: annoyance: bewilder: bewildered: bewildering: bewilderment: bore: bored: boring: boredom: confound: confounded: confounding : confuse: confused: confusing: confusion: depress: depressed: depressing: depression: devastate: devastated: devastating