I think there is no other name but sometimes it is called the 'pp'.
The word "gathers" is a the third person singular present indicative form of the verb "gather". It is not any kind of participle or any past tense.
Recite is a regular verb. The past participle of any regular verb can be made by adding "ed" to the end of the word. Recited is the past participle of recite.
"Sold" does not have any past participle; it is the past participle of "sell".
A participle adjective is a past or present participle of a verb being used as an adjective.For example, broken is the past participle of the verb break.Past participle as an adjective: He has a broken arm.Frightening is the present participle of the verb frighten.Present participle as an adjective: That was a frightening movie.
"Am" is the first person singular present indicative form of "to be", for which the past participle is "been". Fundamentally, only infinitive verbs have past participle's; therefore "am", which can not be a proper infinitive, does not have any past participle.
The word heir is a noun and so doesn't have any tenses.
"Extent" is a noun, not a verb, and therefore does not have any past participle. The corresponding verb, "extend" has "extended" as its past participle.
The word 'conceded' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to concede. The past participle of a verb is also an adjective. Examples:verb: We expect our opponent to concede at any moment.adjective: The conceded amendments will be added to the charter.
It doesn't have any tenses as it is a noun.
"High" is an adjective, not a verb; therefore, it does not have any past participle form
The word "foolish" is an adjective. It describes a noun. ("He asked a foolish question.") Only a verb can have a past participle, and since "foolish" is not a verb, it does not have any past participle. On the other hand, "fool" can be used as a noun ("Don't act like a fool!") or it can be used as a verb-- to fool someone. Using it as a verb gives it a past tense (he fooled his friends with magic tricks); and with the participle, it would be used like this: "He has fooled many people over the years."
The word 'incensed' is the past participle of the verb to incense (to make extremely angry; to perfume). The verb forms are incense, incenses, incensing, and incensed.The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, used to describe a noun: an incensed driver.The word 'incense' is also a noun, a word for asubstance that is burned for the sweet smell it produces.