The present participle is a word ending in --ing. eg watching, looking, winding, helping
Present perfect is a grammatical tense with the verb phrase have/has + past participle. eg
We have seen the movie. The doctor has taken my blood pressure. She has walked to school.
The present participle is the "-ing" form of a verb (e.g., walking, singing) used in progressive tenses or as a modifier. The present perfect tense is formed with "have" + past participle and indicates an action that happened at an unspecified time in the past, with relevance to the present.
The present progressive: am/is/are + present participle. The present perfect progressive: have/has + been + present participle. The past progressive: was/were + present participle. The past perfect progressive: had + been + present participle. The future progressive: will + be + present participle. The future perfect progressive: will + have + been + present participle.
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."
Present perfect. Present perfect is formed with have / has + past participle. transformed is the past participle of transform
The three perfect tenses of a verb are the present perfect (have/has + past participle), the past perfect (had + past participle), and the future perfect (will have + past participle).
The present perfect tense with the past participle of "sing" is "have sung."
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."
Present Perfect is a form that will use the verb ''to have" + past participle of the main verb. e.g I have walked.Present Perfect Continuous is a form that will use the verb ''to have'' + to be (past participle) +verb + ing. e.g I have been walking.
The difference in meaning is that the action stated by a present perfect tense may have been completed in the last second of time before the present, while the past perfect implies completion at a substantially earlier time. The formal difference is that the present perfect is formed from the present tense of "have", used as an auxiliary verb, combined with the past participle of the principal verb. For the past perfect tense, the past tense of "have" as the auxiliary verb is combined with the past participle of the principal verb.
The present perfect tense uses the past participle.
The present progressive: am/is/are + present participle. The present perfect progressive: have/has + been + present participle. The past progressive: was/were + present participle. The past perfect progressive: had + been + present participle. The future progressive: will + be + present participle. The future perfect progressive: will + have + been + present participle.
Present perfect. Present perfect is formed with have / has + past participle. transformed is the past participle of transform
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.
Present perfect tense.
The past participle is the verb that's used in the present perfect tense.
The present participle is getting. The past participle is gotten.
The present perfect is -- have /has + past participle = has/have slept.
The present perfect tense with the past participle of "sing" is "have sung."