JbhB682 Wrote:"Noun (no comma) having __ed" is WRONG.
In the above scenario, is "Having" really playing the role of present participle (Verb-ing) ?
I guess technically they are both participles. Strictly, a participle is a word formed from a verb (e.g., doing, done, being, been ) and used as an adjective or a noun, but in English, participles are also used to make compound verb forms (e.g., are arriving, had been traveling).
Take the example "The ice cream having melted is sitting on the counter." (WRONG)
It's probably best to think of it this way:
Subject: ice cream
Verb: is sitting
Modifier of the subject: having melted (WRONG)
---> The main participle is "melted," which would be better as an adjective placed before ice cream ("the melted ice cream is sitting...")
---> The other participle "having" is serving as a helper to "melted," and is just setting the timeline, much the same way "has" functions in "he has walked" or "she has been walking," i.e. all of these actions started in the past and are still true or still happening.
---> Ron's earlier point is that this timeline helper is unnecessary in such a modifier, because once the ice cream is melted (simple past), of course it's still true, so you can just use the past (or past participle).
It will never be correct to say "The ice cream having melted is sitting..." but you could say:
The ice cream that melted into the fabric is hard to wash out.
The melted ice cream is sitting on the counter.
Seeing the ice cream melting so quickly makes me glad I bought cotton candy instead.