Participles are verbal adjectives formed with the suffixes ( mediopassive participle ), among others.
2.
The past participle, a verbal adjective, may inflect for gender and number in certain constructions.
3.
Here the complement is a verbal adjective, as Marco Polo already pointed out above; nouns, predicatives and adjectives also suit the verb " find ".
4.
I just made this edit, with the edit summary : " " renown " is a noun; what we need here is a verbal adjective, " renowned " ".
5.
Karip�na French Creole's semi-passive verbal adjective form may, rather than the result of a superstratum French influence, be a construction derived from one of Karip�na's many substratum languages.
6.
The rule is that the last vowel of a succession of syllables that end in a short vowel is dropped, for example the declinational root of the verbal adjective of a root PRS is " PaRiS-".
7.
Macedonian developed an alternative form of the sum-perfect, which is formed with the auxiliary verb'to have'and a verbal adjective in neutral, instead of the verb'to be'and verbal l-form.
8.
Like the perfect of perfective verbs, Macedonian also developed an alternative form of the sum-perfect, which is formed with the auxiliary verb'to have'and a verbal adjective in neutral, instead of the verb'to be'and verbal l-form.
9.
All words of these types may be called "'verbal adjectives "', although those of the latter type ( those that behave grammatically like ordinary adjectives, with no verb-like features ) may be distinguished as "'deverbal adjectives " '.
10.
It is a form of syntantic ambiguity and, I guess, amphibology, but the examples given there and above don't seem to meet my criteria . " Man eating cabbage " is either unhyphenated 2-word verbal adjective + noun, or noun + verb + noun.