Just take 150 regular verbs in English and add the morpheme "-ed" to the end of each.
Eg. "work" ---> "worked"
Now do this with another 149 regular verbs. Here's a couple to get you started:
plant, record, move, blast, start.
The past participle of bring is brought, and the present participle is bringing.
Wrote is the past tense, written is the past participle, and writing is the present participle.
Napped is the past participle; napping is the present participle.
The present participle is writing.The past participle is written.
Tear (to destroy, separate):The past tense is tore.The past participle is torn.The present participle is tearing.Tear (to produce tears):The past tense is teared.The past participle is teared.The present participle is tearing.
Present participle - developing. Simple past - developed. Past participle - developed.
The past participle is cultured. The present participle is culturing.
Protected is both past and past participle.
Has is not the past participle of have. Has is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of have. Had is the past participle of have.
Bringing is the present participle of bring; brought is already in past participle form.
The present participle is tapping. The simple past tense is tapped. The past participle is tapped.
Present participle - crying Past participle - cried
Beautiful is not a verb therefore it doesn't have a present form or a past participle
Am is the first person singular form of the verb be. The present participle for be is being, and the past participle is been.
"Tell" is the present form, "told" is the past tense, and "told" is also the past participle.
Here are some examples of the present form, past form, and past participle form verbs: Present - Past - Past Participle eat - ate - had eaten walk - walked - had walked jog - jogged - had jogged sing - sang - had sung drink - drank - had drunk play - played - had played
No. "Running" is a present participle. (As far as I know, no past participle in English ends in the letters "ing").