The present participle is getting. The past participle is gotten.
"Burst". The perfect participle has the same form as the infinitive "burst", as in "He had suddenly burst into the room."
You can't make a past perfect sentence with the word shake.The past participle form of the verb is used in past perfect. The past participle of shake is shaken.He had shaken his fist at me.
There is no perfect participle but the past participle of lose is lost
The present perfect tense with past participle for the word "lie" is "have lied."
As a participle or a perfect tense verb.
The word were is a past tense conjugation of "to be" (the other word is was).The past participle of "to be" is been.Past tense: they were dancingPast perfect tense : they had been dancing
The perfect participle indicates completed action. You form the perfect participle by putting the present participle having in front of the past participle. The past participle of discover is discovered.So the perfect participle is -- having discovered.Having discovered Tahiti Cook sailed on to New Zealand.
The word "did" is the past tense conjugation of the verb "to do."The past participle is done.Past tense: he did his homeworkPast perfect : he had done his homework
The present perfect tense uses the past participle.
A perfect participle is a verb form that combines the functions of a present participle and a past participle. It is formed by adding the prefix "having" to the past participle of a verb. For example, "having finished" or "having studied." It is used to show that one action was completed before another action in the past.
Well, there are some variations. The adjective perfect has the comparative form more perfect, and the superlative most perfect.The verb perfect has the third person singular present perfects; the present participle perfecting; and the past participle perfected.And, of course, the present participle of the verb, perfecting is also a gerund. And the past participle perfected is also an adjective.The noun perfect is the present perfect, the past perfect, and the future perfect tenses for verbs. Other noun forms are perfecter, perfectness, perfection, and perfectionist.Lastly there's the adverb perfectly.
"Has transformed" is in the present perfect tense. It is used to indicate an action that started in the past and is still relevant in the present.