 
			
				Nov 20th, 2010, 02:40 am
			
			
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      |    Sue   |    |    Join Date: Oct 8th, 2006  Location: Milan  
						Posts: 1,406
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        Re: "Somebody is agreed on..." and "Somebody agrees on..."       The meaning is exactly the same.    - All the experts were agreed on one point.  "agreed" = adjective, meaning "in agreement". You could also say :  All the experts were in agreement on one point.   
It's a strange use of the adjective because normally we expect a participle adjective to have passive meaning -as in eg They were tired/surprised/bored/interested etc where the meaning is Something tired/surprised/bored/interested them. But with "agreed" the meaning is active, making it a direct parallel with the verb in ...   
- All the experts  agreed on one point.  "agreed" = past verb   
I've been trying to think of another example where a participle adjective has an active meaning like this, but can't off-hand. Anybody?          |