The word "drive" is a verb as well as a noun.
The noun 'drive' is a word for:
The noun forms of the verb to drive are driver and the gerund, driving.
The word 'driven' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to drive. The past participle is also an adjective.The noun forms for the verb to drive are driver and the gerund, driving.And of course, the word drive is a noun: Let's go for a drive.
Latin 'pactus', the past participle of 'pangere' (to drive in).
The word driving is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb drive.
The past participle is had.
Drove is the past tense of drive. The past participle of drive is driven.
The present participle of drive is driving.(See Related questions below)
Drive (noun), drives (verb), drove (past tense verb), driving (present participle verb).
Done is the past participle.
Present participle - driving Simple past - drove Past participle - driven
No, the word old is an adjective, not a participle.
The past participle of the word "Find" is the word "Found."
The plural of drive-in is drive-ins.