Perfect participle phrase in detail

In this post, we learn what a perfect participle phrase is and how to use it in a sentence correctly.

What is a Perfect Participle phrase?

A perfect participle phrase refers to an action that occurred before the action in the main clause. It identifies the subject of the main clause and acts as the reason why the main clause took place. The noun or the pronoun (subject) the perfect participle phrase identifies is either the subject of the perfect participle phrase or the object of its main verb.

Having finished the work on time , Jon went out for a walk.

Having finished the work on time is the perfect participle phrase that identifies the subject ‘Jon’ and working as the reason why Jon went out on a walk. Both these actions (finishing the work and going out for a walk) happened in the past. Notice that the action in the perfect participle phrase happened first and is the reason why the second action took place.

Also, note that the doer (subject) of the main clause (Jon) is also the subject of the perfect participle phrase. It’s Jon who finished the work and went out for a walk.

Instead of using the perfect participle phrase, we can use a subordinating clause or an adverb phrase to render the same meaning.

Having been accused of thievery, Max left the company .

Having been accused of thievery is the perfect participle phrase that identifies the subject ‘Max’ and tells us the reason why Max left the company. Note that the subject of the main clause ‘Max’ is not the subject of this phrase; it is actually the object of the verb ‘accuse’. Max was accused by someone; he didn’t accuse himself. The perfect participle phrase is in the passive voice: the writer wants to focus on the object of the verb ‘accuse’, not its subject.

We can shift the position of the clauses: we can place the main clause before the subordinate clause.

Perfect participle phrases can be used in both the active voice and the passive voice. Let’s understand both situations separately.

Perfect participle phrase explanation and examples

Perfect participle phrase ( active voice)

Perfect participle phrases are formed in the active voice when the doer of the main clause (subject) is the doer of the perfect participle phrase too.

Structure : (Having + past participle (V3) + object/modifier (optional)) + (Main clause )

A perfect participle phrase generally appears at the beginning of a sentence, but it can also come at the end of the sentence. It is offset by a comma when it comes after the main clause (at the end) to avoid being misidentified. Notice in the last two sentences that the perfect participle phrase is offset using a comma and comes after the main clause.

Perfect participle phrase ( passive voice)

Perfect participle phrases are formed in the passive voice when the subject of the main clause is the object of the verb in the perfect participle phrase.

Structure : (Having + been + past participle (V3) + object/modifier (optional)) + (Main clause )

Perfect participle phrase ( negative )

We insert the word ‘not’ before the present participle ‘having’ to form a negative perfect participle phrase.

Position of a perfect participle phrase

A perfect participle phrase can come at the following places in a sentence:

  1. Before the main clause
  2. Right after the subject of the main clause
  3. After the main clause

We, now, know what A perfect participle phrase in English is, how it looks like, how to identify it, and how to use it correctly in a sentence. Feel free to share your doubt, question, and feedback in the comment section. Also, share the post with others to help them.

Now, we know what the difference between each and every is and everything about them. Feel free to share your question, doubt, or feedback in the comment section, and also, share the post with the people that need it.

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