The past participle is the verb that's used in the present perfect tense.
A gerund is a noun, and is not the same as a present participle, even though both are spelled the same.A present participle is that form of any verb which ends in -ing, such as in I am swimming in the river; Mary will be running in a race at this time tomorrow. These tenses are called progressive tenses, because the action at the time spoken of is in progress and has not yet ended.The present perfect tense does not use the present participle in the verb; it uses the past participle because the action spoken of that began in the past has been completed as of the present time or continues into the present.Example: The children have sung three songs. They began singing in the recent past and finished just now, in the present. The past participle is sung. I sing now; I sang yesterday; I have sung in the past, but that action is now complete, and that completed action is still true now in the present.
The past tense is "came" and the past participle is "come", which in this irregular verb has the same form as the present tense.
"Hurt" is one of the "invariable" irregular verbs: Its past tense and past participle are both the same as the present.
Set is one of those verbs which have the same word for present past and past participle - set.Another example is cut.
The past perfect tense is created with the auxiliary verb had and a past participle.Examples:The past perfect tense of walk is had walked. (Walk is a regular verb, so the past tense and past participle are the same.)The past perfect tense of break is had broken. (Break is an irregular verb. The past tense is broke, and the past participle is broken.)
No they are not the same but the past perfect tense uses the past participle.
This is one of the "invariable" verbs: Its past participle is the same as its present.
This is a present perfect verb form. Present perfect is have/has + past participleThe past participle of run is the same - run. So you have run is correct --- or he has run
The past participle of "read" is "read" and the present participle is "reading". (The past participle has a different pronunciation from the present tense, even though the spelling is the same.)
A gerund is a noun, and is not the same as a present participle, even though both are spelled the same.A present participle is that form of any verb which ends in -ing, such as in I am swimming in the river; Mary will be running in a race at this time tomorrow. These tenses are called progressive tenses, because the action at the time spoken of is in progress and has not yet ended.The present perfect tense does not use the present participle in the verb; it uses the past participle because the action spoken of that began in the past has been completed as of the present time or continues into the present.Example: The children have sung three songs. They began singing in the recent past and finished just now, in the present. The past participle is sung. I sing now; I sang yesterday; I have sung in the past, but that action is now complete, and that completed action is still true now in the present.
Set could be past or present because the present, past and past participle are all the same egset / set / set
The past tense is "came" and the past participle is "come", which in this irregular verb has the same form as the present tense.
"Hurt" is one of the "invariable" irregular verbs: Its past tense and past participle are both the same as the present.
Set is one of those verbs which have the same word for present past and past participle - set.Another example is cut.
The past perfect tense is created with the auxiliary verb had and a past participle.Examples:The past perfect tense of walk is had walked. (Walk is a regular verb, so the past tense and past participle are the same.)The past perfect tense of break is had broken. (Break is an irregular verb. The past tense is broke, and the past participle is broken.)
Pluperfect is the same as past perfect. Past perfect is:had worked / had visited / has seen / had eaten etcSo a pluperfect verb phrase is - had + past participle
The past perfect is formed with - had + past participle. It is the same for all subjects.The past participle of view is viewed so past perfect is - had viewed.I had viewed the goods before the auction.They had viewed the goods before the auction.The bidders had viewed the goods before the auction.