Sweet isn't a verb and so doesn't have a present participle.
Sweet isn't a verb and so doesn't have a present participle.
Sweetened Sweet is an adjective rather than a verb. Sweeten is a verb, and, as stated above, sweetened is its past tense. Another answer with additional information: Verbs in English have four forms: present tense, present participle, past tense, and past participle. You can always get it correct by substituting: Present tense: Today I sweeten. Present participle (sometimes called gerund): Now I am sweetening. Past tense: Yesterday I sweetened. Present or past participle: I have sweetened. Listen to yourself speak. If you speak correct English, it works for all verbs.
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.
The past participle of do is done. The past participle of have is had.
The present participle is "sowing" and the past participle is "sown".
Present participle - winding Past participle - winded
Begun is the past participle, and beginning is the present participle.
The present participle is beating. The past participle is beat.
The past participle of am is been. Not does not have a past participle
talk is regular. The present participle is talking, the past participle is talked.
The present participle of "see" is "seeing" and the past participle is "seen." For example: "I am seeing" (present participle) and "I have seen" (past participle).
No, the word store is not a participle. The present participle is storing. The past participle is stored.