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In
linguistics, a
participle is a
non-finite verb verb form that can be used in compound
Grammatical tense or Grammatical voice, or as a Grammatical modifier. Participles often share properties with other parts of speech, in particular adjectives and
nouns.
Participles in Modern English
English language verbs have two participles. One, called variously the
present,
active,
imperfect, or
progressive participle, is identical in form to the
gerund, and indeed the term
present participle is sometimes used to include the gerund. The term
gerund-participle is also used. The other participle, called variously the
past,
passive, or
perfect participle, is usually identical to the verb's
preterite (past tense) form, though in irregular verbs the two usually differ. Examples of participle formation include:{|class="wikitable"|
Verb||Preterite
(past)||Past
Participle||Present
Participle||Regular/
Irregular|-|
talk|colspan="2" align="center"|talk
ed||talk
ing| rowspan = "2" | regular|-|
hire|colspan="2" align="center"|hir
ed||hir
ing|-|
do||did||done||do
ing|rowspan="6"|irregular|-|
say|colspan="2" align="center"|said||say
ing|-|
eat||ate||eat
en||eat
ing|-|
write||wrote||writt
en||writ
ing|-|
beat||beat||beat
en||beat
ing|-|
sing||sang||sung||sing
ing|}
The present participle in English is active. It has the following uses:
- forming the progressive aspect: Jim was 'sleeping.
- modifying a noun: Let sleeping dogs lie.
- modifying a verb or sentence: Broadly speaking, the project was successful.
The present participle in English has the same form as the
gerund, which however is a noun. Thus the word sleeping
in Your job description does not include sleeping
past noon is not a present participle.The past participle has both active and passive uses:
- forming the perfect aspect: The chicken has 'eaten.
- forming the passive voice: The chicken was eaten.
- modifying a noun, active sense (certain intransitive verbs only): our fallen comrades
- modifying a noun, passive sense: the attached files
- modifying a verb or sentence, passive sense: Seen from this perspective, there is no easy solution.
As noun-modifiers, participles usually precede the noun (like
adjectives), but in many cases they can or must follow it:
- Please bring all the documents 'required.
- The difficulties encountered were nearly insurmountable.
Participles in other languages
Latin
Compared with English, Latin has an additional
future tense participle:
- present active participle: educāns "teaching"
- perfect passive participle: educatus "(having been) taught"
- future active participle: educātūrus "about to teach"
- future passive participle: educāndus "(necessary) to be taught"
Latin participles decline like
adjectives.
Old English
- In Old English, present participles ended in -ende or -iende depending on verb class. In Middle English, various forms were used in different regions: -ende (SW, SE, Midlands), -inde (SW, SE), -and (N), -inge (SE). This latter form eventually fell together with the suffix -ing, used to form verbal nouns.
- Past participles were marked with a ge- prefix, as is done today in Dutch and High German.
Lithuanian
Among Indo-European languages, Lithuanian language is unique for having thirteen different participial forms of the verb, that can be grouped into five when accounting for inflection by tense. Some of these are also inflected by gender and case. For example, the verb
eiti ("to go, to walk") has the active participle form
einąs/einantis ("going, walking", present tense), the passive participle form
einamas ("being walked", present tense), the adverbial participle
einant ("while it is being walked"), the semi-participle
eidamas ("while is/was going, walking") and the participle of necessity
eitinas ("that which needs to be walked"). The first three of those five are inflected by tense, while the active, passive and the semi- participles are inflected by gender and the active, passive and necessity ones are inflected by case.
Esperanto
Esperanto has a full range of regular and symmetric passive and active participles in three tenses: past, present and future. The vowels
i,
a, and
o show past, present, and future tenses respectively (a system also used in the finite verb tenses), followed by
nt for active participles and
t for passives, plus a grammatical ending. Thus we have for example (the
-a ending is the adjective ending), from
skribi, "to write":
- Past active participle: skribinta "having written"
- Present active participle: skribanta "writing"
- Future active participle: skribonta "about to write"
- Past passive participle: skribita "written"
- Present passive participle: skribata "being written"
- Future passive participle: skribota "about to be written", or to be written at some future time
Esperanto has other suffixes which take over some of the more metaphorical uses of, for example, the Latin future passive participle, such as the meaning of worthiness or necessity.
Interlingua
In
Interlingua, active participles end in
-nte. For example,
dansa ("dances") gives
dansante ("dancing"). Passive participles end in
-te:
dansate ("danced"). In Interlingua, like in English, the perfect aspect is formed using a form of the verb
haber ("to have") plus the passive participle; for example,
haber dansate is "to have danced".
French
There are two basic participles:
- Present participle: formed with the verb root + ant, hence marchant "walking", étant "being"
- Past participle: formation varies according to verb group, such that we have marché "walked", été "been", vendu "sold", mis "placed", and fait "done". May require agreement.
The French present participle, however, is not used to mark the
continuous aspect as it is in English.
Compound participles are possible:
- Present perfect participle: ayant appelé "having called", étant mort "having died"
- Passive perfect participle: étant vendu "being sold, having been sold"
Spanish
In Spanish, the present participle (
el gerundio; also called the "gerund" or "gerundive") of a verb is generally formed with one of the suffixes
-ando,
-iendo; the past participle (
el participio) is generally formed with one of the suffixes
-ado,
-ido.
Traditionally, Spanish grammar has regarded the present participle not as an adjective, but as an adverb, and it does not change form to agree with any noun in gender or number. Nonetheless, it is used in much the same ways as the (adjective) present participle in English; for example, Spanish's equivalent of English's progressive aspect (e.g.,
to be doing) is formed with a combination of the verb
estar (
to be in a transient sense) and the present participle of the main verb (e.g.,
estar haciendo).
By contrast, the past participle is considered an adjective, and agrees with a noun in gender and number, except when used to express the perfect aspect (e.g.,
to have done, which in Spanish is
haber hecho).
Finnish
Verb: tehdä (to do)
Present active: teke
väPresent passive: teh
täväPast active: teh
nytPast passive: teh
tyAgent participle (passive): teke
mä (done by...)
Kinds of participles in various languages
Adverbial and adjectival
In some languages, a distinction between adverbial participle and adjectival participle can be made. Among these is Esperanto. See :ru:Причастие (язык) and
:ru:Деепричастие in
Russian grammar, or
:hu:Határozói igenév and :hu:Melléknévi igenév in
Hungarian grammar. Also many Eskimo languages make such a distinction, see for details e.g. the sophisticated Sirenik language#Participles.
See also
References
- Participles from the American Heritage Book of English Usage (1996).
Participle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Present Participle
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Definition: participle from Online Medical Dictionary
The Online Medical Dictionary is a searchable dictionary of definitions from medicine, science and technology.
Present Participle
The Present participle is formed by taking the nous form of the Present tense, replacing the -ons with -ant.
LILT:Participle
The participles are those verb forms in English which can be used in combination with ‘be’ or ‘have’, e.g. ‘is going’, ‘has gone’.
The Participle
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