You’re scrolling through Instagram stories, mindlessly tapping. Then you see it. Your ex, the one who said they needed to "find themselves," has found themselves in Paris. And they've dyed their hair platinum blonde.
The old way of thinking is two separate events: "My ex posted a story. I feel annoyed."
English has a cheat code for this. It lets you pack the cause and the effect into one clean, high-impact sentence: Their post made me annoyed[TRANS].
This isn't just about saving words. It's a different way of seeing the world. It’s about the aftermath.
The "Cause & Effect" Engine
Most learners think in simple steps: Subject does Verb to Object. I painted the wall[TRANS]. She sent the text[TRANS]. This is fine, but it’s like describing a movie frame by frame.
The structure we're talking about adds one more piece to the puzzle. It describes the new reality created by the action.
It answers the question: "Okay, you did the thing... and then what?"
I painted the wall green.
Her silence left me confused.
The Opinion Machine
This grammar pattern isn't just for physical changes like painting a wall. Its most powerful use is for declaring your opinion as a fact.
You're not just saying what you think. You're assigning a label to something or someone. You're defining its reality.
This is a subtle but massive shift in power.
I find his confidence arrogant.
She considers that movie a masterpiece.
Playing Director in Your Own Movie
Here’s the deep-dive. This sentence structure (Subject + Verb + Object + Adjective) isn't just a way to describe things. It's a way to impose your will on reality. It puts you in the director's chair of your own life.
When you say, The news made me anxious[TRANS], you are casting "the news" as the actor that has power over your emotional state. When you say, I consider him a good friend[TRANS], you are casting "him" in the role of "good friend" in your personal story. You are the one who gives out the labels and defines the relationships.
This is the grammar of authorship. It’s for people who don’t just experience the world but actively interpret it and assign meaning. You're not a passive observer watching events unfold. You are the one who decides what each event means and what its consequences are.
The Golden Rule: Stop thinking in a simple "A did B" sequence. Start thinking about the chain reaction: "A did B, which turned C into D." This single shift will make your English sound more decisive, more powerful, and infinitely more sophisticated.
View Comprehensive Vocabulary List
There are about a dozen verbs that are masters of this pattern. Master these 10, and you've mastered 99% of it.
`The movie made me sad.`
The movie made me sad.
`I find this app useful.`
I find this app useful.
`We consider the project complete.`
We consider the project complete.
`His comment left her speechless.`
His comment left her speechless.
`Please keep the door closed.`
Please keep the door closed.
`She painted her nails black.`
She painted her nails black.
`The constant notifications drove him crazy.`
The constant notifications drove him crazy.
`Don't call me lazy.`
Don't call me lazy.
`I think him qualified for the job.`
I think him qualified for the job.
`I need to get my hands clean.`
I need to get my hands clean.