The present participle of sleep is sleeping.
Yes. Sleeping is the present participle of sleep
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.
The present participle is beginning.
The present participle is breaking.
The present participle is cutting.
Sleeping is the present participle; slept is the past participle.
Yes. Sleeping is the present participle of sleep
The present perfect tense for "sleep" is "have slept" or "has slept."
Present perfect is formed with have / has + past participle. The past participle of sleep is slept, so the present perfect is have slept or has slept eg They have slept all day She has slept all day
Yes. Sleeping is the present participle of sleep
The present participle is verb + ing. So for sleep the present participle is sleeping.The present participle is used with continuous tenses eg present continuous and past continuous.Present continuous -- I am sleeping, He is sleeping, we are sleepingpast continuous -- I was sleeping, He was sleeping, we were sleeping.Some longer sentences;The boys are sleeping over at Jack's house tonight. We were sleeping outside when the storm came.
The past progressive tense of "sleep" is "was sleeping" or "were sleeping", depending on the subject of the sentence.
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").
Presenting is the present participle of present.
Presenting is the present participle of present.
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.