The past tense of "come" is simply "came". The past participle form is also "come". "Come" is an irregular verb, unlike other verbs ending in -ed
Present participle is derived from verb and functions as adjective. Most verbs form present participle by adding "-ing". UK English doubles "l" in two-syllable words ending in "l". US English doubles "l" only when final syllable is stressed
Drink is an irregular verb with past tense (drank) and past participle (drunk) forms. Drank is used for past tense, drunk for past participle. Drunk can also function as an adjective meaning intoxicated
Turkish causative verbs use suffix -r, -t, or -dır to indicate someone else caused the action. Subject doesn't directly perform the action, but helps or gets someone else to do it
German has two types of participles: present (-d) and past (-t/-en). Present participle formed by infinitive + d, used for simultaneous actions. Past participle formed with ge- prefix and -t/-en endings. Some verbs change stem or add extra -et in past participle
English has three main tenses: past, present, and future. Past tenses describe actions that occurred at specific times. Simple past shows completed actions in the past. Past continuous describes ongoing actions at specific times. Past perfect shows actions completed before another past event