No. Walking is the present participle of walk, it can be used to show past or present tense eg
I was walking to the pool when I met Jack. -- past
The boys are walking to the beach. -- present
walked
Walking is a present participle. Present participles can be used to create the progressive (continuous) tenses. They rely on auxiliary verbs to show the tense. Examples: Am/Is/Are walking (present progressive) Was/Were walking (past progressive) Will be walking (future progressive)
Present continuous uses present tense be verbs ie am / is / are.I am walking the park. He is walking to the park. They are walking to the park.Past continuous uses past tense be verbs ie was / were.I was walking to the park. He was walking to the park. They were walking to the park
You are walking.
walking
Walk/walks is the present tense of walked. Walking is the present participle.
The present progressive tense of "walk" is "walking."
Present tense - walk/walks/walking Past tense - walked Future tense - will walk
The present progressive tense ends in ING.For example, I am walking, I am talking etc. answer
I/you/we/they walk. He/she/it walks. The present participle is walking.
You have been walking is present tense and you walked is past
They are Simple Tense past, present and future......as in walked, walk and will walk. Continuous past and present. as in was walking and am walking Perfect present, as in have walked Perfect continuous, as in have been walking
"Does she not walk gracefully?" changes to "Is she not walking gracefully?" in the present continuous tense.