The past participle is dared.
"Dared" is the past tense and past participle of "dare".
The past participle is dared.
The word daring is an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means adventurous. The verb form is the present participle of the verb dare.
No, it is a noun or verb.As a verb: I dare you to stand outside in a lightning storm.As a noun: That is a dare I will not accept.Daring (the present participle form of dare) can be used as an adjective--Only a daring person would do something so absurd.
The word 'daring' is a noun form called a gerund, the present participle of a verb (to dare) that functions as a noun in a sentence. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:My buddies were daring me to come over and talk to you. (verb)The skier is known for his daring. (noun, object of the preposition)The opposing player made a daring move. (adjective)
You ask someone dare or double dare then they choose one, if they choose dare you dare them something,but they get 2-5 chickens to use if they don't want to do that dare, if they choose double dare they have to do the dare no exceptions,so I would lock the door before you say the double dare. ;)
A popular dare is ''I dare you to kiss (someone)"
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.
1. i dare you to lick the tolet seat 2. i dare you to get into your swim suit and ask your neighbor for some water 3. i dare you to pee on someone 4. i dare you to sing an adel song 5. i dare you to dance like you're drunk 6. i dare you to spin for 1 min than walk in a stright line 7. i dare you to dare me...
The past participle of do is done. The past participle of have is had.
she has dare to come with me
Yes, it can be (challenged laws, challenged beliefs). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to challenge, and so is usually a verb form.