Lesson 6: Bored and boring
Some adjectives, like ‘bored’ and ‘boring’, have two versions. (These are actually participles used as adjectives.) These adjectives are used in a slightly different way from normal adjectives. We usually use the adjective with ‘ed’ (originally the past participle) to talk about how someone feels.
- I was really bored during the flight (NOT:
I was really boring during the flight). - She’s interested in history (NOT:
She’s really interesting in history). - John is excited about his trip. (NOT:
John is exciting about his trip.)
We usually use the adjective with ‘ing’ (originally the present participle) to talk about the person, thing, or situation that has caused the feeling.
- It was such a long, boring flight (so I was bored).
- I read a really interesting book about history (so I was interested).
- Going on a trip is exciting (so John is excited).
Make sure you don’t use the adjective that ends with ‘ing’ to talk about how you feel!
- NOT: I am boring. (This means that other people find you boring, not that you feel bored!)
At this level of English, you should know:
- Bored / boring
- Excited / exciting
- Interested / interesting