安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Drank and Drunk: Whats the difference? | Merriam-Webster
In modern established use, drank is the past tense of drink ("I drank a glass of water"), and drunk is the past participle ("I have drunk three glasses of water today")
- Drink, Drank or Drunk – What is the Past Tense Of Drink?
The word “drank” is the past simple tense form of the verb “drink,” which is supposed to indicate a completed action in the past He drank a cup of tea yesterday
- Drank vs. Drunk: Modern Usage Made Clear | YourDictionary
Drank is the correct word to use when you're talking about something that happened at a specific time in the past It doesn't vary by speaker; using drank with singular or plural subjects is always correct in past tense
- DRANK Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
DRANK definition: a simple past tense and past participle of drink See examples of drank used in a sentence
- Drink, Drank, Drunk: When To Use Drank vs. Drunk - Thesaurus. com
Drank is the past tense form, as in I drank two glasses of water last night Drunk is the past participle, as in She had drunk three cups of coffee before 9 a m
- Drank or Drunk? - Grammar Monster
Drank and drunk are easyo to confuse Drank is the past tense of to drink Drunk is the version used after had, has, or have (i e , the past participle)
- Drank vs Drunk | Tenses Examples - LanguageTool
The past tense of drink is "drank" (e g , "I drank a lot of soda yesterday") The past participle is "drunk" (e g , "He was drunk")
- Drank or Drunk – Which One Is Correct? - grammartribe. com
Drank is used for past actions without auxiliary verbs, while drunk is always used as a past participle with have, has, or had Both words are correct, and there is no difference between British and American English for these forms
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