Past Perfect: had known, had been, had danced, had taken.
"Taken" is the past participle form of the verb "take" and is used when something has been removed or seized in the past. "Taking" is the present participle form of the verb "take" and is used when the action is happening in the present or to describe a continuous action. For example, "He has taken the book from the shelf" (past) and "She is taking notes during the lecture" (present).
Taken is a verb, the past participle of take.
Take them to a vet or to a SPCA to be taken care of
The word "passed" is the past tense of the verb "pass." It indicates that the action being described has already taken place.
The past participle of "taken" is "taken." For example, "I have taken the exam."
Form: had + past participleVerb: takePast participle: takenExample: "We found ourselves lost because we had taken a wrong turning."Meaning: n.b. There are TWO events: (1) we took a wrong turning, then (2) we realised we were lost.The Past Perfect is used to refer to a completed action in the past which occurred before another event in the past.
Simple past - took Past participle - taken
'Action' is a noun, it doesn't have a past tense.
The past perfect tense is used to show that an action was completed in the past before another past action or time. It is formed by using "had" followed by the past participle of the verb.
The past participle of take is taken.
The past tense of "take" is "took" and the past participle is "taken."