The present participle is not used in passive tenses. Passive is formed by:
be + past participle = is wanted / are being eaten / has been asked etc
Some examples include "read" (present) and "read" (past participle), "cut" (present) and "cut" (past participle), "hit" (present) and "hit" (past participle), and "put" (present) and "put" (past participle).
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
is/are + past participle For example: is asked / are asked is eaten / are eaten
The past participle is used for forming the perfect tenses and passive voice, often ending in -ed or -en, like "bought" or "taken." The present participle ends in -ing and is used to form the progressive tenses or as a gerund, like "buying" or "taking."
It is in present tense, however there might be a difference depending on what the entire verb string is. She is. -present tense She is supposed... -present tense, passive voice In the second example 'supposed' is the past participle of 'suppose'.
have/has flown This above is present perfect active not passive. Passive is be verb + past participle He has been flown to hospital.
300 examples of past participle
is/are + past participle For example: is asked / are asked is eaten / are eaten
The simple present tense can't be used in the passive voice. Simple present is the base form of a verb without the use of auxiliary verbs. Passive voice is created with a form of be (an auxiliary verb) and a past participle. Note: the previous sentence is an example of passive voice in the present tense. Is created is the passive verb.
no
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
Perfect participle passive refers to the form of a verb that indicates the completion of an action in the passive voice. It is created by using the past participle of the verb with an auxiliary verb (like "have" or "been"). For example, "The book has been written" uses the perfect participle passive form of the verb "write" to show that the action of writing the book has been completed in the past.
The present participle of to cook is cooking.Here are two examples of the present participle used in the present progressive tense:I am cooking.You are cooking now.Cook or cooks is the simple present tense.
The phrase - is discussed - is a be verb (is) plus a past participle (discussed).That makes this a passive verb phrase, and because the be verb is present tense it is a present passive verbphrase.Money is discussed very lunch time.
The past participle is also hit. present perfect - I have hit the ball ten times. He has hit the ball twice. past perfect - I had hit the ball ten times. present simple passive - My car is hit every day past simple passive - My car was hit twice yesterday. present perfect passive - My car has been hit again. past perfect passive - My car had been hit three times yesterday.
"Is + [a past participle]" is the third person singular present form of a verb in its passive voice.
Present tense: He reads a book. Past tense: He read a book. Past participle: He has read a book. Progressive: He is reading a book.