The present participle is putting.
The present participle of "put" is "putting."
Some examples include "read" (present) and "read" (past participle), "cut" (present) and "cut" (past participle), "hit" (present) and "hit" (past participle), and "put" (present) and "put" (past participle).
The present tense of put is:I/You/We/They put.He/She/It puts.The present participle is putting.
Putting putting is the present participleExample in a sentence: Yesterday I saw her putting on her lawn sprinkler.The past participle is putThey have put the fire out
The present participle of "do" is "doing".
The present participle of "get" is "getting."
Some examples include "read" (present) and "read" (past participle), "cut" (present) and "cut" (past participle), "hit" (present) and "hit" (past participle), and "put" (present) and "put" (past participle).
The present tense of put is:I/You/We/They put.He/She/It puts.The present participle is putting.
Putting putting is the present participleExample in a sentence: Yesterday I saw her putting on her lawn sprinkler.The past participle is putThey have put the fire out
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").
The verb "put" has the same form for present, past, and past participle.
Presenting is the present participle of present.
Presenting is the present participle of present.
The present participle of "walk" is "walking."
The present participle of "choose" is "choosing."
The present participle of "clean" is "cleaning."
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.