'Cooking' is the present participle of the verb 'to cook'.
Cooked is already the past participle of cook. The present participle is cooking.
It is a verb. It is, however, a PARTICIPLE, if that's what you meant instead of particle. Particles are words (most of which look like prepositions) that go along with verbs, such as "up" in things like "put up, burn up, look up". Participles are a form of the verb itself. The present participle ends in ING and the past participle ends in -ED, -EN, -T, or something else, depending on whether the verb is regular or not. COOKED is the past participle of cook, and COOKING is the present participle. Participles can be used as adjectives, but they are still verbal in nature: the cooked porridge = porridge that has been cooked; the cooking porridge = porridge that is cooking.
Past tense: didDone is the past participle of do. Did is the past form of do.do / did / doneI do the cooking every night.I did the cooking last night.I have always done the cooking.
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.
I/He/She/It was cookingWe/You/They were cooking
It is cook, e.g. Tommorrow I am going to cook eggs and bacon for breakfast.
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.
No, the word store is not a participle. The present participle is storing. The past participle is stored.
The present participle is swelling. The past participle is swelled.
The past participle is proceeded. The present participle is proceeding.
Present participle - winding Past participle - winded
The present participle of beat is beating, and the past participle is beaten.