This states the rule for forming the present perfect tense of "put" for a singular subject.
The past participle of "put" preceded by the auxiliary verb "has" is "put." So it would be "has put."
"Have done" is correct. "Have" is the auxiliary verb and "done" is the past participle in this sentence structure.
To form the present perfect tense, you typically use the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, in the sentence "I have eaten lunch," "have" is the auxiliary verb and "eaten" is the past participle of "eat."
"Been" is not an auxiliary verb by itself. It is a past participle of the verb "be," which can be used with auxiliary verbs (e.g., has been, have been) to form different tenses.
The words "had turned" are a verb phrase. "Had" is the auxiliary verb and "turned" is the main verb.
Yes, "had" is an auxiliary verb that is used to form the past perfect tense in English. It is often followed by a past participle to indicate an action that happened before another action in the past.
There is no past participle. The idiomatic construction "have to" means "must" and is used as an auxiliary verb. (The verb to have has the past tense had and the past participle had.)
The term "had known" is the past perfect tense. Had is an auxiliary verb. Known is the past participle of the verb know.
Yes. For example, the auxiliary verb "be" is used with the past participle to form the passive voice.
"Have done" is correct. "Have" is the auxiliary verb and "done" is the past participle in this sentence structure.
Only verbs have past participles. The main verb in the sentence is go and the past participle of go is gone.Do is also a verb and the past participle of do is done. But do is not the main verb in this sentence it is an auxiliary verb.
Only verbs have past participles. The main verb in the sentence is go and the past participle of go is gone.Do is also a verb and the past participle of do is done. But do is not the main verb in this sentence it is an auxiliary verb.
'had' is the auxiliary verb, 'cared' is the past participle form, and together they create the past perfect tense.
To form the present perfect tense, you typically use the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, in the sentence "I have eaten lunch," "have" is the auxiliary verb and "eaten" is the past participle of "eat."
"Been" is not an auxiliary verb by itself. It is a past participle of the verb "be," which can be used with auxiliary verbs (e.g., has been, have been) to form different tenses.
The term "was sitting" is a verb in the past progressive tense.
The words "had turned" are a verb phrase. "Had" is the auxiliary verb and "turned" is the main verb.
The past participle is "joined". The auxiliary verb is "is".