Examples:
PAST SIMPLE
-We jumped over the stream.
USE OF PAST PARTICIPLE
-Many people have jumped over two metres in the high jump event. (PAST PARTICIPLE in the PRESENT PERFECT)
-If Salim had jumped just one centimetre higher he would have beaten the national record! (PAST PARTICIPLE in the PAST PERFECT)
-It is estimated that, by the end of the year, internet advertising will have jumped another 20% over last year's expenditure. (PAST PARTICIPLE in the FUTURE PERFECT)
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In past participle, the rule is to add "had" then the past participle of the verb. Since the past tense and the past participle of jump is the same (jumped), then it should be "had jumped".
Jumped
jumped
'Jump' is a regular verb, and is a good example.The past participle and the simple past or regular verbs are both formed by adding '-ed' to the verb. (If the verb ends with an 'e', just add '-d', e.g. love/loved, bake/baked )Examples:Simple present: Those boys jump all the time.Past simple: They jumped in the lake last week!Present perfect (using the past participle): ... and they have jumped in it again!
The past participle of am is been. Not does not have a past participle
Jumped is already the past participle of jump.
In past participle, the rule is to add "had" then the past participle of the verb. Since the past tense and the past participle of jump is the same (jumped), then it should be "had jumped".
Jumped
Jumped
jumped
Jumped is the correct spelling for the past participle of to jump.
I/You/We/They have jumped. He/She/It has jumped. she is jumped up and down.
Answer 1There is no such word as learnt. (In fact, Chambers and other dictionaries give it as an alternative to 'learned' - which I must say, I personally prefer)However, both are possible.Answer 2"Learned" in English is both the past simple of "to learn" and the past participle. Most verbs in English have the same past simple and past participle of which a example would be "jumped" and "jumped" - he jumped and he has jumped. An example of where they differ would be "went" and "gone" - he went and he has gone. Learnt is exclusively a past participle. You can say he has learned or he has learnt but you can NOT say he learnt where you CAN say he learned.
'Jump' is a regular verb, and is a good example.The past participle and the simple past or regular verbs are both formed by adding '-ed' to the verb. (If the verb ends with an 'e', just add '-d', e.g. love/loved, bake/baked )Examples:Simple present: Those boys jump all the time.Past simple: They jumped in the lake last week!Present perfect (using the past participle): ... and they have jumped in it again!
The past tense is skipped.
The past participle of am is been. Not does not have a past participle
The past participle of do is done. The past participle of have is had.