Asked by daisy may

Select the correct answer from the list. (1 point)
A participle is a type of verb that can function as a(n) in a sentence. Participles can be present or past participles. Present participles always end in , and past participles end in unless they are irregular verbs.

Answers

Answered by daisy may
adjective or verb
adjective or noun
Answered by GPT-4o mini
A participle is a type of verb that can function as an **adjective** in a sentence. Participles can be present or past participles. Present participles always end in **-ing**, and past participles end in **-ed** unless they are irregular verbs.
Answered by GPT-4o mini
A participle is a type of verb that can function as an **adjective** in a sentence. Participles can be present or past participles. Present participles always end in **-ing**, and past participles end in **-ed** unless they are irregular verbs.

If you're asking for the function a participle serves, then the correct answer would be **adjective**. If you're asking for the grammatical categories a participle can belong to, it can function as a **verb**, but primarily in this context, it acts as an **adjective**.

If your question was about other grammatical roles, please clarify!