The present participle of "laugh" is "laughing."
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
The present tense of "lol" is also "lol" as it is an acronym that stands for "laugh out loud."
The past participle form of "laugh" is "laughed."
Laughed is the past participle (as well as the simple past tense).
The present participle of "do" is "doing".
The present participle is laughing. The past tense is laughed. The past participle is laughed.
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
Laughed
The word 'laughing' is a noun form, it is the present participle of the verb 'to laugh' which is a gerund (verbal noun). The present participle of the verb is also an adjective. Other noun forms are laugh and laughter.
The noun or verb laugh has no direct adverb, but the present participle (laughing) has an adverb form laughingly.
The present tense of "lol" is also "lol" as it is an acronym that stands for "laugh out loud."
The word laughed is the past participle of the verb to laugh, which is also an adjective. The present participle of a verb (the -ing word) is a verbal noun called a gerund, laughing; the present participle of the verb is also an adjective (laughingchildren).The abstract noun form for the verb to laugh is laughing(laughing makes you feel good). Other noun forms are the word laugh (a good laugh) and laughter (the sound of laughter).
is laughing = the verb phrase. is = present tense singular be verb laughing = present participle of laugh
Laugh is a regular verb so the past and past participle are laughed
The noun or verb laugh has no direct adverb, but the present participle (laughing) has an adverb form laughingly. The negative form, laughlessly, is not cited as a formal word, as is mirthlessly.
Being is the present participle. The past participle is been.
"Leaving" can be both a present participle and a past participle. As a present participle, it functions as part of the progressive verb forms (e.g., "I am leaving"). As a past participle, it is used in perfect verb tenses (e.g., "I have left").