"Encouraged" is the simple past and past participle of the verb "encourage".
Yes, the word "encouraged" is a verb. It's the past tense of the verb "encourage"
Surprise is a verb. past = surprised past particle = surprised present participle = surprising
there are 12 verb tenses not only five. present, past, future. simple-- continuous--perfect-- perfect continuous.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb. The present tenses are 'do' and 'does'. The past tense is 'did' whilst the past participle is 'done'.
The term "was sitting" is a verb in the past progressive tense.
Fun isn't a verb, so it doesn't have a past or present participle.
Yes, the word "encouraged" is a verb. It's the past tense of the verb "encourage"
Surprise is a verb. past = surprised past particle = surprised present participle = surprising
choosing
The present particle is always - verb + ing - so for hit that is hitting (watch the spelling).The past participle is the same as the base verb - hit.The forms of hit are:base verb = hitthird person singular = hitspast = hitpast participle = hitpresent participle = hitting
It is an adverb, not a verb,; it can accompany a Present, a Past, a Present Perfect, a Past Perfect and a Future verb.
While it probably does sound like "particle" if you are just learning English grammar, the word is "participle". The verb "to have" is a helping verb; it can be used with a present or a past participle. For example: I have spoken with my sister. ("have" is the helping verb, "spoken" is the participle). He had seen a lot of coats before he found the one he liked ("had" is the helping verb, showing a past action; "seen" is the past participle). So, to sum up, "had" is not a participle, but can be used in a sentence where there is a participle.
Neither: RAN (the second form of a verb is its Past Tense); as for your suggestions, only HAS RUN is correct, but it's a Present Perfect (you use the auxiliary HAVE + the third form = the Past Particle of the respective verb).
'Have' is of the verb 'to have'. 'is' is of the verb 'to be'.
"Got" can be both a past verb and a past particle verb depending on the context. As a past verb, it indicates the action of obtaining something. As a past particle verb, it is used after "have" or "has" to form the present perfect tense (e.g., "I have got a new bike").
regular verb so zoomed
Appeared: "Appear" is a regular verb.