The past participle is ended.
ENDED
End can be a noun.Example:The end of the story was sad.End can be a verb, as well.Example:I'll end the discussion now.
Participles often end with '-ed', '-en', or '-ing'. There are several other common participle suffixes, but I can not recall them off the top of my head. The past participle is, I believe, "seemed."
Wrote is the past tense, written is the past participle, and writing is the present participle.
infinitive: tear past: tore past participle: torn
Tear (to destroy, separate):The past tense is tore.The past participle is torn.The present participle is tearing.Tear (to produce tears):The past tense is teared.The past participle is teared.The present participle is tearing.
The past participle is ended.
Cooked is the past participle. Cook is a regular verb which means the simple past and past participle are the same. They are formed by adding -ed to the end of the verb.
'Came' is the past tense of the verb 'come'. The past participle is also 'come'. 'I have come to the end of my speech.'
Recite is a regular verb. The past participle of any regular verb can be made by adding "ed" to the end of the word. Recited is the past participle of recite.
Most past participles end with an "ed". In this case, it works to. Pulled
Disclosed is not a present participle. It is the past tense and past participle of disclose. Disclosing is the present participle. Present participles always end in -ing.
The present participle of break is breaking. The past participle of break is broken.
Learned is the past tense and past participle of learn. Present participles always end in -ing, so the the present participle of learn is learning.
End can be a noun.Example:The end of the story was sad.End can be a verb, as well.Example:I'll end the discussion now.
The past participle of "do" is "done." The past participle of "have" is "had."
The past participle is the form of a verb that can act as an adjective, be used to create the perfect tenses, and form the passive voice. For regular verbs, past participle end in -ed.The past participle of haunt is haunted. (i.e. the haunted house)
"Leaving" is a present participle, as it is formed from the base verb "leave" with the "-ing" ending added. The past tense of "leave" is "left," and the past participle is also "left."