A suspicious woman

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Hello
I am a bit confused about the word suspicious. Please read the background to see what I have a problem with.

Background: a woman rushed to the exit, she rushed off a plane, but she was stopped by the cabin crew because she was suspicious, her behaviour was suspicious.

1. By rushing to the exit she became suspicious of planting a bomb and stopped by the cabin crew.

Is the verb suspicious used correctly here? Or maybe I should say:

2. By rushing to the exit she became suspected of planning a bomb and stopped by the cabin crew.

Are both correct?
Thank you
 
The first is not correct. It was the crew who became suspicious, not the woman.

In #2, I would change "became" to "was" and "planning" to "planting".
 
Thanks for clarifying. So now we could say:

She rushed off the plane. The cabin crew became suspicious of her behaviour, and as a result she was suspected of planting a bomb.

PS
So I was right to be suspicious of the two tricky expressions. On the other hand, I have never been suspected of anything wrong :)
 
You really shouldn't say that someone was suspected because because someone else was suspicious. Try again.
 
What do you mean? Why not? It was suspicious when she rushed off the plane. The airport security was alarmed by a stewardess. She was questioned by the police and suspected of planting a bomb.
 
I mean that it is very clumsy to say: "You were suspected because you were suspicious". Choose another set of words.
 
Be warned though that it is perfectly possible to say that the woman on the plane looked suspicious. That means she looked like she was doing something wrong/illegal.

She looked suspicious which made the crew suspicious.

Note that that's not a good combination words for the same reason Mike gave about "suspected/suspicious".
 
Just to underline a point: 'suspicious' can be applied to both the suspect and person who suspects them. In that sense, it can be ambiguous.
"The policeman saw a man acting suspiciously, and he became suspicious." It's not that being suspicious is contagious; it's that it has two complementary meanings.
 
I am not a teacher.

Yes, indeed.
In fact, when someone becomes suspicious they don't become suspicious themselves, they become suspicous of someone or something else.
 
Note:

The airport security was [STRIKE]alarmed[/STRIKE] alerted by a stewardess.
 
We don't generally use "the" with "airport security".

Airport security was/were alerted by a stewardess.
The airport security guard/guards was/were alerted ...
 
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