see, saw, seen; cut, cut, cut; buy, bought, bought; dance, danced, danced; move, moved, moved; travel, travelled, travelled; understand, understood, understood; try, tried, tried; go, went, gone.
no
Certainly! Here are examples of the verb "walk" in past tense, present tense, and past participle: Past tense: walked Present tense: walk Past participle: walked Past tense: ate Present tense: eat Past participle: eaten Past tense: went Present tense: go Past participle: gone
Both the present participle (weighing) and past participle (weighed) can be used as adjectives. There is also an adjective "weighty" which is more often used metaphorically.
The past participle adjective surprised has the seldom used adverb form surprisedly. Much more common is the adverb form of the present participle (surprisingly), which may be used incorrectly to mean surprisedly.
No it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to slither. It can be a verb form, a participial, and very rarely an adjective (more frequently used is the present participle, slithering).
'was' is the past simple of the verb 'to be'.The present participle of be is being.For more information, see Related questions below
To form the present perfect tense, use the auxiliary verb "have" (or "has" for third person singular) and combine it with the past participle of the main verb. For example, "I have eaten," "She has gone," "They have finished."
Verb: to becomePresent participles are ~ing forms of the verb. The 'present participle' of become is becoming.The 'present participle' form is used in various ways, and may be used when referring to past, present or future situations. e.g.PAST - "Mary was becoming more and more concerned about her eyesight, so she told ... "PRESENT - "People are becoming increasingly aware of the dangers of too much exposure to the ultraviolet radiation in sunlight."FUTURE - "I expect that in a couple of weeks time I will be becoming less upset about it all."--------------------------------ADDITIONAL INFORMATIONThe 'past participle' of become is become.The 'past tense' form of become is became.--------------------------------For more information about verb forms of 'become', see Sources and Related links below.
Examples of irregular verbs with different present, past, and past participle forms are: Present: go, Past: went, Past Participle: gone Present: eat, Past: ate, Past Participle: eaten Present: take, Past: took, Past Participle: taken
No. "has chosen" uses the past participle of chose, i.e. chosen.The present participle of chose is chosing.For more information about participles, see Related questions below.
"Going" is a verb, not a pronoun or a noun. It is the present participle form of the verb "go," which is used to show an action in progress.
A past participle is a verb form typically ending in -ed or -en that is used to form perfect tenses in English (e.g., "broken" in "She has broken the vase"). A present participle is a verb form typically ending in -ing that is used to form continuous tenses in English (e.g., "running" in "She is running in the park").