infinitive: drive
past: drove
past participle: driven
Present Perfect
have/has + past participle
infinitive: drive
past: drove
past participle: driven
Present Perfect
have/has + past participle
Have/has driven.
driven
The present perfect tense of "form" is "have formed" (for plural subjects) or "has formed" (for singular subjects). It is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle of the verb "form".
To form the present perfect tense, you typically use the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle of the main verb. For example, in the sentence "I have eaten lunch," "have" is the auxiliary verb and "eaten" is the past participle of "eat."
The present perfect form of "to be" is "have been" for plural subjects (I, you, we, they) and "has been" for singular subjects (he, she, it).
The present perfect form of "present" is "have/has presented."
The present perfect form of the verb "to be" is "have been" or "has been", depending on the subject. For example: "I have been," "You have been," "He/She/It has been," "We have been," "You have been," "They have been."
Present perfect tense.
driving into town
It is "have/has posted".
Danced
The perfect form of "think" is "have thought." For example, "I have thought about it."
The present perfect is has/have + a past participle.I have seen that movie already.She has seen that movie, too.
I/you/we/they have been. He/she/it has been.