The present perfect tense uses the past participle.
No, "have been" is not a present participle. It is the present perfect tense of be. Being is the present participle of be.
Present perfect tense.
Past perfect, present perfect and future perfect.
Present tense - singing Past participle - sung
"Has eaten" is the present perfect tense. "Eaten" is the past participle of "eat".
The present participle is getting. The past participle is gotten.
Present perfect. Present perfect is formed with have / has + past participle. transformed is the past participle of transform
The present perfect tense with past participle for the word "lie" is "have lied."
No, the past participle is a verb form that is used in the formation of perfect tenses, passive voice, and other constructions, while the present perfect tense is a specific tense that uses the present tense of the auxiliary verb "have" followed by the past participle of the main verb. So the past participle is a verb form, while the present perfect is a tense.
The present progressive: am/is/are + present participle. The present perfect progressive: have/has + been + present participle. The past progressive: was/were + present participle. The past perfect progressive: had + been + present participle. The future progressive: will + be + present participle. The future perfect progressive: will + have + been + present participle.
Found is the past tense and past participle of the verb find. The present participle is finding. 'Had found' is also the past perfect tense.
The present perfect is -- have /has + past participle = has/have slept.