Dear Teacher,
I am confused and would appreciate your help.
What is the part of speech of "hurt" in the sentence, "He played hurt"?
My dictionaries say "hurt" is either a verb or adjective, and there is no mention of use as and adverb. I don't see anywhere that a past participle can be used as an adverb. If it is an adjective, it would seem that "played" would be a linking verb but I don't see it listed as a linking verb anywhere. What do I make of this sentence?![]()
Context?
In that context it must surely be an adjective.
He played in the game, hurt (tired, unhappy, etc) though he was.
Until I read that context, which would have been helpful in the original post, I took it to mean 'He pretended to be hurt' - as in 'he played dead'.
It would still be an adjective.
Rover
Thank you. The sentence is from an interview article of an athelete. I found many similar usages on the internet, such as, "Shaun Rogers says in radio interview he played hurt last year."
Anyway, if this is an adjective, how is it that it comes right after a verb? Can an adjective modifying the subject come right after a verb like this? It would make sense to me if "played" were a linking verb, but I'm guessing it is not....
Last edited by 5jj; 05-Apr-2011 at 19:29.
He played (even though he was) hurt. The parenthetical is omitted.