The Past Participle form of "kick" is "kicked." If it's used as the main verb in a sentence, it would be "have kicked." If you see "kicked" used as a main verb without the auxiliary "have," then it is merely past tense and not past participle. In addition, if you see the verb kick as "kicked" but not acting as a verb in the sentence, it will be as an adjectival or adverbial participle modifying either a verb or a nominal.
The past tense is "kicked", the past participle is "kicked". The present tense is "kick", the present participle is "kicking". The future tense is "will kick".
There are two participle forms in English the past participle and the present participle.The past participle of kick is kickedThe present participle of kick is kickingThere are future verb phrases. For kick the future verb phrases are:going to kickwill kickam/is/are kicking
The word 'kicked' is not a noun.The word 'kicked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kick. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:He kicked the ball as hard as he could. (verb)The kicked ball flew over the trees and out of sight. (adjective).The word 'kick' is both a noun (kick, kicks) and a verb (kick, kicks, kicking, kicked).
read = read (pronounce "red" as the past participle). stand = stood sit = sat kick = kicked talk = talked
The word 'kicked' is not a noun.The word 'kicked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kick. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:He kicked the ball as hard as he could. (verb)The kicked ball flew over the trees and out of sight. (adjective).The word 'kick' is both a noun (kick, kicks) and a verb (kick, kicks, kicking, kicked).
The past participle of do is done. The past participle of have is had.
The past participle of am is been. Not does not have a past participle
No, the word 'kicked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kick. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:He kicked the ball as hard as he could. (verb)The kicked ball flew over the trees and out of sight. (adjective).The word 'kick' is both a noun (kick, kicks) and a verb (kick, kicks, kicking, kicked).Examples:He gave the ball a good kick and it went over the fence. (noun)When you kick the ball, think about where you want it to go. (verb)
What is the past participle of do
The past participle of have is had....:) I have had...
I, we, they, you kick. He, she, it kicks.
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.