Meant is the past participle; meaning is the present participle.
Mean is the average.
I didn't mean what I said. What does antidisestablishmentarianism mean? My sister is mean. I don't like being mean. The mean of a set of values is the average. The mean temperature is much lower in the valley in spring.
The population mean is the mean value of the entire population. Contrast this with sample mean, which is the mean value of a sample of the population.
If repeated samples are taken from a population, then they will not have the same mean each time. The mean itself will have some distribution. This will have the same mean as the population mean and the standard deviation of this statistic is the standard deviation of the mean.
The mean is the average
The past participle is meant.
The past tense of "mean" is "meant," and the past participle is also "meant."
I suppose you mean swimpast participle of swim is swumswim /swam /swum
Perfect passive participle of induō
dicho = said (participle)
infinitive: mean past: meant past participle: meant
"Been" is the past participle of the verb "to be." It is used to indicate that something has happened or existed in the past.
The past participle of "cuted" is simply "cut." "Cut" is both the past tense and past participle form of the verb "cut."
"Cooked"; it's the past participle of cuire in French.
Holpen is the archaic past participle of help.
'venu' is the present participle of the verb 'venir', to come.
"Belting" is the present participle of "belt" - to hit something, such as with a belt.