Sung is the past participle of sing. Singing is the present participle of sing.
Present tense - singing Past participle - sung
The present tense is sing and sings.The past tense is sang.The future tense is will sing.The present participle is singing and the past participle is sung.
Sing is present tense, sang is past tense, and sung is the past participle.
Sang is the simple past tense of "sing".The past participle of "sing" is "sung".
The past tense of sing is sang, and the past participle is sung.
Present tense - singing Past participle - sung
Present: Singing Past: Sung
The present tense is sing and sings.The past tense is sang.The future tense is will sing.The present participle is singing and the past participle is sung.
You use the past tense of a verb (e.g. sang) when the subject is being talked about in the past (the simple past tense). You use the past participle (e.g. have/has sung) when the subject is being talked about in the present (the present perfect tense). "Sung" is the past participle and "have/has" is an auxiliary verb that implies that the subject is referring to a past action in relation to the current present state.
sing. The forms of sing are: base verb -- sing past -- sang past participle -- sung present participle -- singing
Sing is present tense, sang is past tense, and sung is the past participle.
You use the past tense of a verb (e.g. sang) when the subject is being talked about in the past (the simple past tense). You use the past participle (e.g. have/has sung) when the subject is being talked about in the present (the present perfect tense). "Sung" is the past participle and "have/has" is an auxiliary verb that implies that the subject is referring to a past action in relation to the current present state.
Sang is the simple past tense of "sing".The past participle of "sing" is "sung".
The past tense of sing is sang, and the past participle is sung.
The past participle form of the word "sing" is "sung."
A gerund is a noun, and is not the same as a present participle, even though both are spelled the same.A present participle is that form of any verb which ends in -ing, such as in I am swimming in the river; Mary will be running in a race at this time tomorrow. These tenses are called progressive tenses, because the action at the time spoken of is in progress and has not yet ended.The present perfect tense does not use the present participle in the verb; it uses the past participle because the action spoken of that began in the past has been completed as of the present time or continues into the present.Example: The children have sung three songs. They began singing in the recent past and finished just now, in the present. The past participle is sung. I sing now; I sang yesterday; I have sung in the past, but that action is now complete, and that completed action is still true now in the present.
No, "sung" is the past participle of "sing" infinitive: sing past: sang past participle: sung