Search from various Engels teachers...
Dayane Farias
Rusted or rusty?
They're both adjectives which I suppose to have the same meaning. Thereby I'm finding it hard to use them correctly. Here are the following statements which got me confused about it:
This car looks rusty.
I would never get in that rusted car.
I hate your mom's rusty car.
24 feb. 2020 11:25
Antwoorden · 2
2
The phrases "rusty car" and "rusty tools" are more common than "rusted car" and "rusted tools."
Here is a Google N-gram frequency chart.
https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=rusty+tools%2Crusted+tools%2C+rusty+car%2C+rusted+car&year_start=1800&year_end=2008&corpus=18&smoothing=3&share=&direct_url=t1%3B%2Crusty%20tools%3B%2Cc0%3B.t1%3B%2Crusted%20tools%3B%2Cc0%3B.t1%3B%2Crusty%20car%3B%2Cc0%3B.t1%3B%2Crusted%20car%3B%2Cc0
24 februari 2020
1
I would personally use them interchangeably. In your two example sentences rusty and rusted work equally well. The only time when I can think that this would not be the case would be if you were using rusted as the past participle. For example, you can say “the car had rusted by the time I bought it” but you couldn’t say “the car had rusty by the time I bought it.”
24 februari 2020
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Dayane Farias
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Portugees, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels
Artikelen die je misschien ook leuk vindt

How to Answer “How Was Your Weekend?” Naturally in English
47 likes · 27 Opmerkingen

Why Some Jokes Don’t Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 likes · 5 Opmerkingen

How to Talk About Your Strengths and Weaknesses Professionally
13 likes · 5 Opmerkingen
Meer artikelen
