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📚 What is Cool? And Can Anyone Become Cool? B1

🎯 5 grammar forms💬 18 examples⏱️ 3-4 minutes

📖 Story Summary

What makes someone cool? A recent international study involving 6,000 people across 12 countries tried to discover the secret. Researchers found that cool people share six characteristics: they are extroverted, open, hedonistic, adventurous, autonomous and powerful. However, experts say that becoming cooler is difficult. You can't buy coolness, and claiming to be cool makes you seem uncool instead. The more you try to be cool, the less cool you become. Cultural historians explain that coolness emerged in 1940s New York with jazz, pioneered by young Black artists. Today, coolness is connected with celebrity and the influencer industry. Yet young people struggle to name someone they know personally who's cool. Experts remain skeptical that you can make yourself cooler—it tends to come from obsessive artistic vision or family problems, things you cannot plan.

🎯 Grammar Showcase

Present perfect for life experience and recent actions

Used to connect past events to present relevance

“A recent international study claims to have discovered the secret of coolness, identifying six key characteristics that make someone seem effortlessly desirable.”

→ perfect infinitive after claim (to have + past participle)

“Coolness has to live within you to really make it work.”

→ present perfect showing necessary condition

“Cool emerged in 1940s New York with jazz, pioneered by young Black artists as an act of resistance.”

→ past participle in reduced relative clause

Passive voice for formal reporting

Common in academic and journalistic contexts

“A recent study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology found that cool people have six characteristics.”

→ past participle as adjective modifier

“Selling out to the mainstream was looked down upon.”

→ passive with phrasal verb (past simple)

“At this point, cool is connected with celebrity.”

→ passive showing state/relationship (present simple)

“Those are not things you can plan.”

→ active modal for ability/possibility

Complex sentences with subordinate clauses

Shows cause-effect and comparison relationships

“The more you try to be cool, the more uncool you become.”

→ comparative structure (the more…the more)

“According to the researchers, people can increase how cool they seem to others to a certain extent, but it's limited.”

→ noun clause after verb (how + clause)

“Cultural historians argue that coolness is a combination of rebellion, personal style, extraordinary confidence and charisma.”

→ that-clause after reporting verb

“They can't imagine living a quiet life that anyone would consider cool.”

→ relative clause with modal verb

Contrast connectors

Links ideas showing opposition or unexpected results

However, cool people remain desirable and in demand.”

→ however at sentence start (contrast)

“Cool cannot be bought, although it's enthusiastically sold, and it can't be claimed without losing its benefits.”

→ although showing concession (mid-sentence)

“Otherwise, being inexpressive makes you seem cold rather than cool.”

→ rather than showing preference/contrast

Gerunds and infinitives

Verb forms used as nouns or after other verbs

“What's fundamental to being cool is expressing them in an appropriate way.”

→ gerund after preposition (to)

“Otherwise, being inexpressive makes you seem cold rather than cool.”

→ gerund as subject of sentence

“People who are born introverts will probably struggle to seem consistently socially confident.”

→ infinitive after struggle (verb + to)

“Any attempt risks seeming fake or try-hard, which is worse than being actively uncool.”

→ gerund after risk (verb + -ing)

💡 Study Tip

Practice by describing people you know using these structures: 'She seems confident because…' or 'The more he tries, the less successful he becomes.'

Grammar Practice: What is Cool? And Can Anyone Become Cool?

Test your understanding of the grammar forms from the story.

Perfect Infinitive

Which sentence uses the perfect infinitive correctly after ‘claim’?

Perfect Infinitive

Why is ‘to have discovered’ used instead of ‘to discover’ in this sentence?

Past Participle Clause

Which sentence correctly uses a past participle in a reduced relative clause?

Passive Voice

Which sentence uses a past participle as an adjective modifier correctly?

Passive Voice

Why is the passive voice used in ‘Selling out was looked down upon’?

Passive Voice

Which sentence contains an error?

Comparative Structure

Which sentence uses the comparative structure ‘the more…the more’ correctly?

Noun Clause

What grammatical function does ‘how cool they seem to others’ serve in this sentence?

That-Clause

Which sentence correctly uses a that-clause after a reporting verb?

Relative Clause

Complete the sentence: They can’t imagine living a quiet life ____ cool.

Contrast Connectors

Which sentence uses ‘although’ correctly to show concession?

Contrast Connectors

What does ‘rather than’ express in this sentence?

Contrast Connectors

Which sentence uses a contrast connector incorrectly?

Gerunds & Infinitives

Which sentence correctly uses a gerund after the preposition ‘to’?

Gerunds & Infinitives

Why is the infinitive ‘to seem’ used after ‘struggle’ in this sentence?