Participle

1 On 1 Spanish Teacher Via Skype
Your own private native Spanish teacher for less than $10 per lesson.
www.1on1spanish.net

Participle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, a participle (from Latin participium, a calque of Greek ?????? " ... The term gerund-participle is also used. ...
en.wikipedia.org

participle: Definition from Answers.com
participle n. A form of a verb that in some languages, such as English, can function independently as an adjective, as the past participle baked in
www.answers.com

The Participle
Grammar Bytes! Grammar Instruction with Attitude. Includes detailed terms, interactive exercises, handouts, and more! ... a present participle functions as a ...
www.chompchomp.com

participle definition | Dictionary.com
Definition of participle at Dictionary.com with free audio pronunciation. ... Readers will ordinarily associate a participle with the noun, noun phrase, or ...
dictionary.reference.com

participle - Wiktionary
From Old French participle (1388), a noun-adjective', variant of participe, from ... Retrieved from "http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/participle" ...
en.wiktionary.org

Participle Phrases
Participle Phrases. COLOR KEY and DEFINITIONS ... Participle phrases are often useful for getting rid of weenie "to be" verbs. ...
www.siskiyous.edu

Participle Phrases
Present Participle Phrase. a. ... The action in the present participle phrase is immediately followed by another ... at the beginning of the participle clause: ...
www.edict.com.hk

participle - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
Definition of participle from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
www.merriam-webster.com

What is a participle?
A participle is a lexical item, derived from a verb , that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives.
www.sil.org




Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: Permission denied in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/6a/6a32882d21ee1bba9f4ededc88cc861fbf1a2d76.tc2cache) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 131

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 132



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"|talked||talking| rowspan = "2" | regular|-|hire|colspan="2" align="center"|hired||hiring|-|do||did||done||doing|rowspan="6"|irregular|-|say|colspan="2" align="center"|said||saying|-|eat||ate||eaten||eating|-|write||wrote||written||writing|-|beat||beat||beaten||beating|-|sing||sang||sung||singing|}

The present participle in English is active. It has the following uses: 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:

As noun-modifiers, participles usually precede the noun (like adjectives), but in many cases they can or must follow it:

Participles in other languages Latin Compared with English, Latin has an additional future tense participle:



Latin participles decline like adjectives.

Old English

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":



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:

The French present participle, however, is not used to mark the continuous aspect as it is in English.

Compound participles are possible:

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
Present passive: tehtävä
Past active: tehnyt
Past passive: tehty
Agent participle (passive): teke (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



Participle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, a participle (from Latin participium, a calque of Greek μετοχη "partaking") is a derivative of a non-finite verb, which can be used in compound tenses or ...

Hilary Cottam
I am currently setting up Participle - a new social venture to design the next generation of public services, working with Charles Leadbeater, the internationally renowned thinker ...

Welcome to Participle
Participle is a newly formed company, we are working on our website and plan to have it up and running in Autumn 08. In the meantime, here is a little about us...

participle - definition of participle by the Free Online Dictionary ...
par·ti·ci·ple   (pär t-s p l) n. A form of a verb that in some languages, such as English, can function independently as an adjective, as the past participle baked in We had ...

Dictionary of English - dangling participle or hanging ...
Skip to page content | Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main ...

Present Participle
2002 www.teachit.co.uk Present Participle Present participle: verb or adjective? The fire was roaring fiercely. We sat in front of a roaring fire. Pick out the present participle ...

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
Grammar Bytes! Grammar Instruction with Attitude. Includes detailed terms, interactive exercises, handouts, and more!





 
Copyright © 2008 opini8.com - All rights reserved.
Home | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
All Trademarks belong to their repective owners.
Many aspects of this page are used under
commercial commons license from Yahoo!