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Present participle



         


In linguistics, a participle is an adjective derived from a verb.

In the English language, there are two types of participle:

  1. the present participle, which is formed by adding the suffix "-ing" to a verb (cf. gerund), and
  2. the past participle, which is formed by adding the suffix "-ed".

Verbs which don't follow this process are called irregular verbs.

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Examples

Many adjectives are formed from participles; as in "I saw a talking horse", "It was the done thing" and "She sold the crashed car at a loss".

A present participle is often confused with a gerund, a noun form of a verb with "-ing".

Other languages have different sorts of participles. E.g. Latin has:

Old English ended present participles with -ind. In the East Midlands dialect, it merges with -ing, which originally only named actions.






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