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Jigneshbharati Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Or a past tense

Participles are verbs with –ing and are used as a noun or adjective in a sentence. It is also a past tense with –ed, or a past tense of an irregular verb.

Why do we need the comma in ",or a past tense..."?
Is "or" a coordinating conjunctions here to join two clauses?
  

Top answer

Jigneshbharati Participles are verbs with –ing , and they are used as a noun or adjective in a sentence. It is also a past tense with –ed, or a past tense of an irregular verb. They are also the past participle forms, with -ed for regular verbs, or often with -en for irregular verbs.

  • Jigneshbharati Participles are verbs with –ing , and they are used as a noun or adjective in a sentence.
  • It is also a past tense with –ed, or a past tense of an irregular verb.
  • They are also the past participle forms, with -ed for regular verbs, or often with -en for irregular verbs.
  • "?
  • In your original statement (which is wrong, as I pointed out above), you don't need the comma.
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1 Answers
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JigneshbharatiParticiples are verbs with –ing, and they are used as a noun or adjective in a sentence. It is also a past tense with –ed, or a past tense of an irregular verb. They are also the past participle forms, with -ed for regular verbs, or often with -en for irregular verbs.

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