Present - I/you/we/they eat. He/she/it eats.
Past Participle - eaten.
Eating is the present participle; eaten is the past participle.
No. Eat is present tense, ate is past tense, and eaten is the past participle.
The infinitive is to eat; the past tense is ate; the past participle is eaten; the present participle is eating.
The past tense is ate.(Be careful - eat is an irregular verb which means the past participle is different. The past participle is eaten)The present tense is:I/You/We/They eat.He/She/It eats.The present participle is eating.The future tense is will eat.
The simple past tense of "eat" is "ate" The past participel of "eat" is "eaten" The present tense of "eat" is I/you/we/they eat. He/she/it eats. The present participle is "eating"
The simple past tense is 'drank' whilst the past participle is 'drunk'.
The past participle is eaten.
No! The present perfect is formed with the past participle, not the past indicative; therefore, "has eaten" would be correct.
ate
Here are some examples of the present form, past form, and past participle form verbs: Present - Past - Past Participle eat - ate - had eaten walk - walked - had walked jog - jogged - had jogged sing - sang - had sung drink - drank - had drunk play - played - had played
present / past / past participle cut / cut / cut Run / ran / run eat / ate / eaten have / had / had mistake / mistook / mistaken
"Ate" is the past tense; "eaten" is the past participle.