Wrought is the past tense of work, archaic except when applied to metal - especially iron - and in certain expressions.
By is not a verb and does not have participle forms; however, buy is a verb. The past participle is bought.
Meat is not a verb and does not have participle forms. However, meet is a verb. The past participle is met.
Below is not a verb, but bellow is a verb. Bellowed is the past participle of bellow.
Only verbs have past participles. The main verb in the sentence is go and the past participle of go is gone.Do is also a verb and the past participle of do is done. But do is not the main verb in this sentence it is an auxiliary verb.
Because rescue is a regular verb the past and the past participle is rescued.
wrought
Wrought is a past tense and a past participle of work It means put together; created: a carefully wrought plan.
visit is a regular verb so the past and the past participle are both verb + ed ievisitedvisited is the past participle of the verb visit.
By is not a verb and does not have participle forms; however, buy is a verb. The past participle is bought.
The past participle of the verb die is died.
There is no past participle. The idiomatic construction "have to" means "must" and is used as an auxiliary verb. (The verb to have has the past tense had and the past participle had.)
Invented is the past participle of the verb invent. verb /past /past participle = invent /invented /invented
The past participle of the verb to have is had.
The past participle of the verb to do is "done."
No, "had gone" is not a verb on its own. "Had" is the past participle of the verb "to have" and "gone" is the past participle of the verb "to go." Together, they form the past perfect tense of the verb phrase "had gone."
"Red" is not a verb and therefore does not have a past participle. The closest verb form is "redden". Its past participle is "reddened"
The past participle of the verb die is died.