The past participle is used to form the perfect and pluperfect tenses as in I have asked him.
The past participle of reading is read (pronounced red)
read / read / read But the past and past participle are pronounced - red
The past participle of read is read (pronounced like "red")The present participle of read is reading.
The past participle of "read" is "read" and the present participle is "reading". (The past participle has a different pronunciation from the present tense, even though the spelling is the same.)
Some examples include "read" (present) and "read" (past participle), "cut" (present) and "cut" (past participle), "hit" (present) and "hit" (past participle), and "put" (present) and "put" (past participle).
Present tense: He reads a book. Past tense: He read a book. Past participle: He has read a book. Progressive: He is reading a book.
The past participle of do is done. The past participle of have is had.
It is the past participle of the verb lire, to read. Example: J'ai lu mon libre hier. I read my book yesterday.
A few of the many irregular verbs in English are:drive (present tense) drove (past tense) driven (past participle)lie (present tense) lay (past tense) lain(past participle)ring (present tense) rang (past tense) rung (past participle)read (present tense) read (past tense) read (past participle)am, is, are (present tense of be), was, were (past tense) been (past participle)
The past participle of am is been. Not does not have a past participle
read = read (pronounce "red" as the past participle). stand = stood sit = sat kick = kicked talk = talked
What is the past participle of do