The present participle of "fly" is "flying".
The present tense of fly is:I/You/We/They fly.He/She/It flies.The present participle is flying.
flying
The present participle if flying. The simple past tense is flew. The past participle is flown.
Past tense - flew (simple) & flown (past participle) Present tense - I/you/we/they fly. He/she/it flies. The present participle is flying. Future tense - will fly.
The present participle is a verb ending in -ing that acts as an adjective or an adverb. Therfore, the present participle of fly is flying (i.e. The flying leaves from the trees that day told me that autumn was coming).The past participle is flown.
Flight is a noun, and as such, does not have any tenses. The verb form of flight is fly; the present participle is flying.
"Fly/flies" is the present tense.I flyWe flyYou flyHe/she fliesThey flyThe past tense is "flew", and the past participle is "flown".
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.
"Leaving" can be both a present participle and a past participle. As a present participle, it functions as part of the progressive verb forms (e.g., "I am leaving"). As a past participle, it is used in perfect verb tenses (e.g., "I have left").
Presenting is the present participle of present.
Presenting is the present participle of present.
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.