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"Sung" is the past participle of the verb "sing," while "sang" is the simple past tense. Similarly, "hung" is the past participle of the verb "hang," while "hang" is the simple past tense. The difference lies in the tense and form of the verb being used.
"De" is a preposition used to indicate possession, origin, or relationship between things. "Dé" is the past participle of the verb "devoir" in French.
Like is a regular verb so the past participle is verb + ed, = liked
The past participle of the verb "be" is "been."
A past tense form indicates a completed action or state of being; a past participle is not by itself an active verb and is used (i) as an adjective, often together with other words that constitute an adjectival phrase; or (ii) to form passive and present or past perfect tenses of the verb of which it is a past participle, these tenses requiring an auxiliary verb as well as the principal verb.
Present Perfect is a form that will use the verb ''to have" + past participle of the main verb. e.g I have walked.Present Perfect Continuous is a form that will use the verb ''to have'' + to be (past participle) +verb + ing. e.g I have been walking.
The word contrasting is an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means showing the differences between something. The verb form is the present participle of the verb "contrast".
a gerund does the work of a noun and a verb whereas participle does the work of an adjective and a verb
"Sung" is the past participle of the verb "sing," while "sang" is the simple past tense. Similarly, "hung" is the past participle of the verb "hang," while "hang" is the simple past tense. The difference lies in the tense and form of the verb being used.
"De" is a preposition used to indicate possession, origin, or relationship between things. "Dé" is the past participle of the verb "devoir" in French.
By is not a verb and does not have participle forms; however, buy is a verb. The past participle is bought.
Like is a regular verb so the past participle is verb + ed, = liked
The past participle of the verb "be" is "been."
A past tense form indicates a completed action or state of being; a past participle is not by itself an active verb and is used (i) as an adjective, often together with other words that constitute an adjectival phrase; or (ii) to form passive and present or past perfect tenses of the verb of which it is a past participle, these tenses requiring an auxiliary verb as well as the principal verb.
Survival is not a verb and does not have participle forms. Survive is a verb, and the present participle is surviving.
The past participle of the verb "study" is "studied."
The difference in meaning is that the action stated by a present perfect tense may have been completed in the last second of time before the present, while the past perfect implies completion at a substantially earlier time. The formal difference is that the present perfect is formed from the present tense of "have", used as an auxiliary verb, combined with the past participle of the principal verb. For the past perfect tense, the past tense of "have" as the auxiliary verb is combined with the past participle of the principal verb.