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- When to use awoke awakened awoken? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
The verb forms for awake are irregular, but the most common choices are awake, awoke, and was awoken The verb forms for awaken are regular: awakens, awakened, was awakened
- Awake or Awaken Which one is correct?
I have awoken awakened early only twice this month Awaken is a transitive verb requiring a direct object It means “cause [someone or something] to become awake” It is a regular verb: both the past and past participle forms are awakened: My wife awakens me if I oversleep My wife awakened me at seven o’clock He was awakened by a loud
- Use of awake and awaken - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
You could use its past participle, awoken or awakened (depending on who you ask), which would be grammatical, but using the adjective awake is more idiomatic So, if you want a verb, you could use awake, awaken, wake or waken, but if you want an adjective there's just awake, and the others are not alternatives to it
- word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
When the soldiers awoke, it was a bright day Can I replace ‘awoke’ by ‘woke’ and why?
- Woken up by or woken by? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Which one is more grammatically correct? He was woken up by his alarm clock He was woken by his alarm clock
- sentence meaning - wake up, awaken and awake - English Language . . .
He woke up to find others gone He awakened to find others gone He awoke to find others gone All of the sentences can be found grammatical in OED and they seem identical in meaning I am wonde
- What is the difference between waked and woke?
Pearl S Buck was a woman, so your question should ask why she used 'waked' 'Woke' and 'waked' are both possible choices as the past tense of 'wake' 'Waked' is seen by some as old-fashioned in modern speech and writing However, Pearl S Buck was born in 1892, to parents born in the 1850s, and wrote 'Christmas Day in the Morning' in 1955, when she was aged 63
- grammaticality - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I'm working with a book for English composition The book suggests "Lying awoke in bed pleasant" as an answer for a question written in my language But I think the sentence is grammatically incor
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