No. -ing is used for the present participle.
No, "-ing" is not a past participle. It is used to form the present participle tense in English. The past participle often ends in "-ed" or "-en," depending on the verb.
"Leaving" is a present participle, as it is formed from the base verb "leave" with the "-ing" ending added. The past tense of "leave" is "left," and the past participle is also "left."
Yes, "running" is the present participle form of the verb "run." The past participle form of "run" is "run."
If you are referring to Gerunds (what I gather Americans call Present Participle), then yes, they do. There is also another mood, the Participle (Or Past Participle), which does not end in -ING.
Yes, "debated" is a present participle. It is formed by adding "-ing" to the base form of the verb, in this case "debate."
Past participles of regular verbs end in -ed or -d, for example, learned (learnt), liked, talked, winked. Past participles of irregualar verbs end differently and not with -ed, for example, been, done, run, sung. Present participles end in -ing
Yes, "running" is the present participle form of the verb "run." The past participle form of "run" is "run."
"Leaving" is a present participle, as it is formed from the base verb "leave" with the "-ing" ending added. The past tense of "leave" is "left," and the past participle is also "left."
fizzied That is the (Past) Participle; the Gerund or Present Participle has an -ING ending = fizzing.
Disclosed is not a present participle. It is the past tense and past participle of disclose. Disclosing is the present participle. Present participles always end in -ing.
If you are referring to Gerunds (what I gather Americans call Present Participle), then yes, they do. There is also another mood, the Participle (Or Past Participle), which does not end in -ING.
Learned is the past tense and past participle of learn. Present participles always end in -ing, so the the present participle of learn is learning.
The word "trained" can be both a participle and a gerund depending on its use in a sentence. As a participle, it functions as an adjective (e.g., "the trained dog"). As a gerund, it functions as a noun (e.g., "training is important").
Participles often end with '-ed', '-en', or '-ing'. There are several other common participle suffixes, but I can not recall them off the top of my head. The past participle is, I believe, "seemed."
Was/were is used with a present participle (-ing form of a verb) to create the past progressive.I was talkingWe were talkingYou were talkingHe/she was talkingThey were talking
Infinitive to has an obligation/mandatory kind of sense. Present participle simply describe on-going action. The present participle is the -ing form of a verb. It is used in continuous/progressive tenses. eg present continuous = am/is/are + verb +ing = He is waiting, they are watching past continuous = was/were +verb + ing = She was walking, they were sleeping present perfect continuous = have/has been + verb + ing = I have been waiting, she has been shopping. past perfect continuous = had been + verb + ing = They had been fishing, He had been sleeping
A participle is a verb used as an adjective. The are two kinds of participles. The past participle has the past form of the verb which would go with the verb have and would usually end in -ed. The present participle ends in -ing.
advanced - past participle beginning - present participle, easily identified by the " ing " ending.