past participle of go: went, gone
Past tense:
I went to the cinema.
Past perfect tense:
I have gone to the cinema.
To relax = Relajarse Relaxing (Past participle) = Relajado (For example, Spanish is relaxing = Español es relajado) Relaxing (Present participle) = Relajando (For example, He is relaxing = Él está relajando)
"Redémarrant" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "starting over."Specifically, the French word is the present participle of the infinitive "redémarrer." The infinitive sometimes is used in French where the present participle/gerund is used in English. The pronunciation is "ruh-deh-mah-raw."
Privant is the present participle of the verb 'priver', meaning 'to deprive' in French. 'Privant' is translated as 'depriving'.
The Latin equivalent of 'working together' is collaborans. The form represents the present participle of the infinitive 'collaborare'. The past participle form is 'collaboratus' when referring to masculine gender peoples and objects, 'collaborata' for feminine, and 'collaboratum' for neuter.
(literally) 'viendo' (present participle/gerund), but e.g. 'seeing is believing' would use the infinitive 'ver es creer' (literally 'to see is to believe')
The present participle of the word "go" is "going."
Gone is the past participle of go. Going is the present participle of go.
The present participle of go is going.
The present participle tense for the word "go" is "going."
Yes, the present participle of go is going.
"To go" in Spanish is "ir". The present participle is "yendo".
The present participle of "go" is "going" and the past participle is "gone".
I/you/we/they go. He/she/it goes. The present participle is going.
went and gone
The tenses for 'go': Present: Go Past: Went Past-Participle: Gone Present-Participle: Going Third-Person Singular: Goes
I/you/we/they go. He/she/it goes. The present participle is going.
I/you/we/they go. He/she/it goes. The present participle is going.