When the action happened in the past, then you use the past participle. "I threw the ball" or "I watched the play." The base form of the verb is used when the action is happening right now, as in "I throw" or "I watch." However, it is more common to see "am throwing" or "am watching." The most common way you will see the base form is in commands. "Watch the play" or "Throw the ball" are the things you would say when you are telling someone what to do.
The past participle is used when forming the perfect tenses and passive voice. The base form of a verb is used in the present tense and to form the simple past tense.
The past participle of "felt" is "felt." It remains the same in both its base form and past participle form.
The Base Form of say is "say"; the Past Tense is "said"; the Past Participle is also "said"; and the Gerund Form is "saying".
No, "should" is not an irregular verb. It follows a regular pattern in conjugation, with "should" being the base form, "should" as the past form, and "should" as the past participle form.
It is the same as the base form -- come. come came come
The past participle of "pending" is "pending." This means that it remains the same as the base form regardless of tense.
That's it - cling Cling = base form clung = past clung = past participle clinging = present participle
The past participle of "felt" is "felt." It remains the same in both its base form and past participle form.
The Base Form of say is "say"; the Past Tense is "said"; the Past Participle is also "said"; and the Gerund Form is "saying".
spend is the base verb spent is the past form spent is the past participle spending is the present participle
No, "should" is not an irregular verb. It follows a regular pattern in conjugation, with "should" being the base form, "should" as the past form, and "should" as the past participle form.
It is the same as the base form -- come. come came come
Consider is the base form of the verb. Considered is the past participle, considering is the present participle.
Base form = Strive Past simple = Strove Past participle = Striven 3rd person singular = Strives Present Participle/Gerund = Striving
The past participle of "pending" is "pending." This means that it remains the same as the base form regardless of tense.
Enjoy is not a participle Enjoy is a base verb. Its other forms are: enjoy -- base verb enjoys -- third person singular form enjoyed -- past and past participle enjoying -- present participle
The past participle of "form" is "formed."
No, "hit" is both the base form and the past tense of the verb. The past participle form is "hit."