How are past participles used in perfect tenses?

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Apr 30, 2026
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Tamil
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I’ve been a bit confused about how past participles are used in perfect tenses. Can you explain how they work with “have,” “has,” and “had,” and maybe give a few clear examples?
 
You need to give us some example sentences in which you're confused as to how they work. We don't like to just spoonfeed answers to learners.
 
I understand—it probably helps to work with examples. Could you explain using something like:
“I have eaten,” “I had eaten,” and “I have been eating”?
I’m mainly confused about why the past participle is used after “have/has/had” and what it adds to the meaning.
 
Those are examples of perfect forms, not sentences in which you're confused how they work.
I’m mainly confused about why the past participle is used after “have/has/had” and what it adds to the meaning.
The past participle is part of every perfect construction. The sentence has no meaning without it.
 
“I have eaten,” “I had eaten,” and “I have been eating”?

I’m mainly confused about why the past participle is used after “have/has/had” and what it adds to the meaning.
I don't understand. If a past participle isn't used after those words, you're left with ...

I have.
I had.
I have been.

How on earth would the listener/reader know you were talking about eating if you didn't put the relevant verb after have/had/have been?

If you're asking why a past participle form is used instead of another verb form, please tell us what verb form you would want to put there.
 

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