The past participle form of a verb is used to form the perfect tenses and passive voice. "Run" or "come" in the past participle form helps convey actions or states that have already happened or completed. This form is often used in sentences where the focus is on the result or outcome of the action.
To create the past, present, and future perfect tense as well as conditionals.
Past perfect:
Had run & had come
Present perfect:
Have/has run & have/has come
Future perfect:
Will have run & will have come
Present conditional:
Would run & would come
Perfect conditional:
Would have run & would have come
All verbs have a past tense form and a past participle form. For regular verbs, the past tense and past participle ends in -ed.Example:walk (present tense) walked (past tense and past participle)Irregular verb do not have the -ed ending.Example:run (present tense) ran (past tense) run (past participle)
The past tense of run is ran. "The boy ranhome." The past participle is run. "The boy has runhome every day this week."
infinitive: run past: ran past participle: run "You have run" is correct.
For a regular verb let's use "answer". Present: answer, Past: answered, Past Participle: answered. For an irregular verb let's use "run". Present: run, Past: ran, PP: run.
You form the past tense of regular verbs by adding -ed. The past tense of regular verbs is also the same form used for the past participle.Irregular verbs don't add -ed to form the past tense but rather the word changes. For example 'eat' becomes 'ate'.andthe past participle for irregular verbs is often a different word (or it can be the same as the past)for example:eat / ate /eaten - eaten is the past participle.dig / dug / dug - dug is past participle.run / ran / run - run is the past participleBecause they are irregular verbs there is no rule how to form the PP you just have to learn them.
The present participle of "run" is "running". English does not have future participles for any verb. There are various expedients when translating into English from foreign languages that do have a specific grammatical form for future participles, but these should probably be sought under translations from the language in question.
Running doesn't have a past participle. Running is the present participle of run. Ran is the past participle of run
Run base verb is run past verb in ran past participle is run
infinitive: run past: ran past participle: run
All verbs have a past tense form and a past participle form. For regular verbs, the past tense and past participle ends in -ed.Example:walk (present tense) walked (past tense and past participle)Irregular verb do not have the -ed ending.Example:run (present tense) ran (past tense) run (past participle)
The past participle is also 'run'. The simple past tense is 'ran'.
It is run. This is one of the few verbs where the infinitive and past participle are the same. The simple past tense is different (ran).Past Participle: runPast simple = Ran (e.g. He RAN out of the store)Past participle = Run (e.g. He was RUN out of the store)
"Ran" is not a basic verb; instead, it is the past tense of "run". The past participle of "run" is "run", somewhat confusingly.
The past tense of run is ran. The past participle is run.
The past tense of run is ran. "The boy ranhome." The past participle is run. "The boy has runhome every day this week."
infinitive: run past: ran past participle: run "You have run" is correct.
This is a present perfect verb form. Present perfect is have/has + past participleThe past participle of run is the same - run. So you have run is correct --- or he has run