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Select the correct form.
It's ____________________________ to guess who will win the competition this year.

It's no use... + present participle is a set expression. The participle must use -ing, so only no use trying is acceptable here.

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Participle

Participles are verb forms that do double duty — they help build tenses and voices, but they also work as adjectives and adverbs. Understanding both types of participles is essential for forming correct verb tenses, using the passive voice, and writing more sophisticated sentences.

The Two Participles

English has two participles:

  1. Present participle — formed by adding -ing to the base verb: doing, running, sleeping. It's identical in form to the gerund, but serves a different function (more on that below).
  2. Past participle — for regular verbs, it's the -ed form (walked, boiled). For irregular verbs, it varies widely: done, written, sung, gone.

How the Present Participle Is Used

  • Progressive tenses: She is reading a book.
  • As an adjective: The woman sitting by the window is my boss.
  • As an adverb: Looking up from his phone, he noticed the bus had arrived.
  • In absolute constructions (with its own subject): The weather being terrible, we cancelled the trip.

Present participles used as adjectives carry an active meaning — an exciting movie is one that excites you.

How the Past Participle Is Used

  • Perfect tenses: They have finished the project.
  • Passive voice: The email was sent this morning.
  • As an adjective: The broken window needs replacing.
  • Adverbially: Exhausted from the hike, we fell asleep immediately.

Past participles used as adjectives usually carry a passive meaning — the attached file is one that has been attached. However, past participles of intransitive verbs can have active meaning: fallen leaves (leaves that have fallen).

Participle vs. Gerund

Both the present participle and the gerund end in -ing, but they do different jobs. The participle acts as an adjective or adverb; the gerund acts as a noun.

  • Swimming in the lake, she felt completely free. (participle — describes she)
  • Swimming is her favourite hobby. (gerund — subject of the sentence)

The famous example Flying planes can be dangerous is ambiguous: flying could be a gerund ("the activity of flying planes") or a participle ("planes that fly").

Self-check: If you can replace the -ing word with a noun like "it" or "the activity," it's a gerund. If it describes a noun or tells you more about an action, it's a participle.

Watch Out: Past Tense vs. Past Participle

For regular verbs, the past tense and past participle look the same (walked, played). For many irregular verbs, they differ:

  • ✅ I went home early. (past tense)
  • ✅ I have gone home early. (past participle)
  • ❌ I should have went home early.

If you're unsure, check whether the verb follows a helping word like have, has, or had — if it does, you need the past participle form.

Ready to practise? Try Gerund vs. Participle: Understanding -ing Word Functions, Participle Clauses: Shortening Sentences with -ing and Having + Past Participle, or Participle vs Gerund.

Gerund

The gerund takes the same form (ending in -ing) as the present participle, but is used as a noun (or rather the verb phrase introduced by the gerund is used as a noun phrase). Many uses of gerunds are thus similar to noun uses of the infinitive. Uses of gerunds and gerund phrases are illustrated below:

As subject or predicative expression:

  • Solving problems is satisfying.
  • My favorite activity is spotting butterflies.

As object of certain verbs that admit such constructions:

  • I like solving problems.
  • We tried restarting the computer.

In a passive-type construction after certain verbs, with a gap (zero) in object or complement position, understood to be filled by the subject of the main clause:

  • That floor wants/needs scrubbing.
  • It doesn't bear thinking about.

As complement of certain prepositions:

  • No one is better at solving problems.
  • Before jogging, she stretches.
  • After investigating the facts, we made a decision.
  • That prevents you from eating too much.

It is considered grammatically correct to express the agent(logical subject) of a gerund using a possessive form (they object to my helping them), although in informal English a simple noun or pronoun is often used instead (they object to me helping them).

B2 | Upper Intermediate

B2, or Upper Intermediate, is the fourth level on the CEFR scale. It marks the point where you move from "getting by" to genuinely comfortable communication — handling complex topics, expressing nuanced opinions, and understanding most of what you read or hear in real-world contexts.

What a B2 user can do

At this level, you're expected to:

  • Understand complex texts on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in your own field.
  • Follow extended speech and lectures, even when the structure isn't entirely clear, as long as the topic is reasonably familiar.
  • Interact fluently and spontaneously enough that conversations with native speakers flow naturally — without strain on either side.
  • Produce clear, detailed text on a wide range of subjects, using connectors and cohesive devices to build well-structured arguments.
  • Explain and defend a viewpoint on a topical issue, weighing the advantages and disadvantages of different options.
  • Recognize implicit meaning — reading between the lines in demanding, longer texts.

What B2 grammar looks like in practice

B2 is where grammar stops being about isolated rules and starts being about flexibility and precision. You're expected to control structures like:

  • Advanced conditionals and mixed conditionals — moving beyond simple if-clauses to express hypothetical and counterfactual meaning.
  • Passive voice in varied tenses and contexts, not just present and past simple.
  • Reported speech with correct sequence of tenses, including backshifting and reporting verbs.
  • Participle clauses and the distinction between participles and gerunds.
  • Comparative and superlative structures beyond basic -er/-est, including double comparatives and qualifying expressions.

Errors still happen at B2, but they rarely cause misunderstanding. The goal is controlled, flexible use of language across social, academic, and professional settings.

How B2 fits in the CEFR progression

B2 builds directly on the foundations of B1 (Intermediate) and prepares you for C1 (Advanced). Many university entrance exams, professional certifications, and immigration requirements target B2 as the minimum standard.

Self-check: If you can read a newspaper editorial, follow most of a TED talk without subtitles, and write a clear essay arguing a position — you're likely operating at B2.

Ready to test yourself? Try Is your English level B2/Upper Intermediate? or practise specific B2 grammar with challenges like Basics. Advanced Conditionals And "wish", Basics. Passive Voice, and Sequence of Tenses in Indirect Speech.

Difficulty: Hard

Hard difficulty. Difficulty levels represent author's opinion about how hard a question or challenge is.