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- Sank or Sunk – What’s the Difference? - Writing Explained
Is it sank or sunk? Sank and sunk are two conjugations of the verb sink, which means to descend or fall Sank is the simple past tense conjugation of the verb Sunk is the past participle They cannot be interchanged; there are clear usage cases for each tense
- SANK Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of SANK is past tense of sink
- Sank or Sunk – What’s the Difference? - Two Minute English
The difference between sank and sunk lies in their use in sentences Sank is the simple past tense of the verb ‘sink,’ which means it’s used to talk about something that happened in the past For example, “The ship sank last year ”
- SANK Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Sank definition: a simple past tense of sink See examples of SANK used in a sentence
- SANK | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
(Definition of sank from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
- sank - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
cause to plunge in or down: The submarine sank the battleship He sank his fist into the pillow to cause to fall, drop, or descend gradually to cause to penetrate: to sink an ax into a tree trunk Civil Engineering to lower or depress the level of: They sank the roadway by five feet
- How to Use Sank vs. sunk Correctly - GRAMMARIST
Sank is the past tense (e g , the ship sank to the bottom of the sea) Sunk is the past participle, so it’s used in the perfect tenses (e g , the ship has sunk to the bottom of the sea) and as an adjective (the sunk ship is at the bottom of the sea)
- Sank - definition of sank by The Free Dictionary
1 to fall, drop, or descend gradually to a lower level or position: The ship sank to the bottom of the sea 2 to settle or fall gradually: The building is sinking 3 to fall or collapse slowly from weakness, fatigue, etc : He sank to his knees 4 to penetrate or permeate; seep
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