Participles Definition
There are two participles in English: the present participle and the past participle. They can both be used as adjectives
The present participle is formed by adding -ing to the base form of a verb. It is used in:
i) Continuous or Progressive verb forms - I'm leaving in five minutes.
ii) As an adjective: A dying man
The past participle is formed by adding -ed to the base form, unless it is an irregular verb. It is used:
i) As an adjective - A tired group
ii) With the auxiliary verb 'have' to form the perfect aspect - They've just arrived.
iii) with the verb 'be' to form the passive - He was robbed a couple of days ago.
See Also:
Auxiliary Verb; Ditransitive Verb; Dynamic Verb; Finite Verb; Inchoative Verb; Intransitive Verb; Irregular Verb; Modal Verb; Non-finite Verb; Phrasal Verb; Regular Verb; Stative Verb; Transitive Verb; Verb Group; Verb Phrase