No. -ing is used for the present participle.
Leaving is a present participle. All present participles end with -ing
No. "Running" is a present participle. (As far as I know, no past participle in English ends in the letters "ing").
If you are referring to Gerunds (what I gather Americans call Present Participle), then yes, they do. There is also another mood, the Participle (Or Past Participle), which does not end in -ING.
The suffixes of "conjured" are -ed (past tense) and -ing (present participle).
The suffix for "delay" is "-ed" for past tense (e.g., delayed) and "-ing" for present participle (e.g., delaying).
Leaving is a present participle. All present participles end with -ing
Disclosed is not a present participle. It is the past tense and past participle of disclose. Disclosing is the present participle. Present participles always end in -ing.
Learned is the past tense and past participle of learn. Present participles always end in -ing, so the the present participle of learn is learning.
No. "Running" is a present participle. (As far as I know, no past participle in English ends in the letters "ing").
fizzied That is the (Past) Participle; the Gerund or Present Participle has an -ING ending = fizzing.
If you are referring to Gerunds (what I gather Americans call Present Participle), then yes, they do. There is also another mood, the Participle (Or Past Participle), which does not end in -ING.
The suffixes of "conjured" are -ed (past tense) and -ing (present participle).
The suffix for "delay" is "-ed" for past tense (e.g., delayed) and "-ing" for present participle (e.g., delaying).
Participles often end with '-ed', '-en', or '-ing'. There are several other common participle suffixes, but I can not recall them off the top of my head. The past participle is, I believe, "seemed."
No it's a past participle. The present participle is debating.
Was/were is used with a present participle (-ing form of a verb) to create the past progressive.I was talkingWe were talkingYou were talkingHe/she was talkingThey were talking
Past participles of regular verbs end in -ed or -d, for example, learned (learnt), liked, talked, winked. Past participles of irregualar verbs end differently and not with -ed, for example, been, done, run, sung. Present participles end in -ing