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The past participle form of the word "use" is "used."
Worse is rarely used as a verb. When it is, the past and past participle is worsed.
Used (e.g "It had been used for...", "John was used", etc.)
Used is the past participle; using is the present participle.
Winding can be a present participle when it is used as a verb form (e.g., He is winding the clock). It can also be used as an adjective, such as in "a winding road," which describes the road as having twists and turns.
The past participle form of the word "use" is "used."
A participle adjective is a past or present participle of a verb being used as an adjective.For example, broken is the past participle of the verb break.Past participle as an adjective: He has a broken arm.Frightening is the present participle of the verb frighten.Present participle as an adjective: That was a frightening movie.
There is no past participle. The idiomatic construction "have to" means "must" and is used as an auxiliary verb. (The verb to have has the past tense had and the past participle had.)
Worse is rarely used as a verb. When it is, the past and past participle is worsed.
The past participle of fashion (used as a verb) is fashioned.
No. When used as a verb, the past participle of coat is coated.
Used is the past participle; using is the present participle.
The word sitten is the past participle of sit. It is used as a verb.
The word "foolish" is an adjective. It describes a noun. ("He asked a foolish question.") Only a verb can have a past participle, and since "foolish" is not a verb, it does not have any past participle. On the other hand, "fool" can be used as a noun ("Don't act like a fool!") or it can be used as a verb-- to fool someone. Using it as a verb gives it a past tense (he fooled his friends with magic tricks); and with the participle, it would be used like this: "He has fooled many people over the years."
The past tense of "read" is "read." The past participle of "read" is also "read."
Chartered can be used as the past participle of charter.
No. -ing is used for the present participle.