Do participial phrases have any aspect by default?

I think there should be a much broader agenda and I know it is difficult to imagine having the Congress work on so many issues at the same time. Because I know that because of having been there: It does require a level of organization and follow-through that is hard and I know that having been there. In this case,

readers can clearly see the perfect aspect being used in the participial phrase “having been there”. My question is simply how to describe the aspect in a participiial phrase that lacks such clear marking. “I saw the car pulled out”, does “pulling out” have its own continuous aspect or does it simply borrow the aspect of the verb in the clause it belongs in?

How do you explain the state of “I am sitting” but not “one’s sitting”?

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Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.
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