"Awoke" and "woke up" are the simple past tense forms of "to awake" (also, "to awaken") and "to wake up".
These two forms are variants of the same verb. "To awake" is akin to the Old English verb "awæcnan" while "to wake up" is from an Old English variant of that root form, "onwacan".
The only significant difference between the two is when "awake" is used as an adjective as in "to be awake", where it does not have the sense of to become roused, to rise from a state of sleep; but is only used to indicate being in a state of wakefulness.
The simple past tense is woke up.
Isn't it wake up?
awoke.
the always had hangovers so they never woke up
they woke up when ever they wanted to
No. "You woke up" is correct.The past tense of the verb "to wake" is woke, and some conjugations may also use the past tense of the verb "to awake" which is awoke.Examples:I awoke to discover my blankets in a pile on the floor.You were tardy because you woke up late.He awoke the following morning with no memory of what had happened.
wake or woke
The base word of "awoke" is "awake."
No. "You woke up" is correct.The past tense of the verb "to wake" is woke, and some conjugations may also use the past tense of the verb "to awake" which is awoke.Examples:I awoke to discover my blankets in a pile on the floor.You were tardy because you woke up late.He awoke the following morning with no memory of what had happened.
Nicodemus visited Jesus at night although it doesn't say he awoke Him in the process!
No single disciple is named as being the one who woke Jesus. According to Matthew's account, "His disciples came to Him and awoke Him" (Matt 8:25); Mark says, "they awoke him" (Mk 4:38), and Luke's account says, "they came to Him and awoke Him" (Luke 8:24).
The teacher woke him up
Woke up - I woke up this morning with a headache.
I Woke Up was created in 1997.
woke up = despertó
the teacher woke him up
Woke Up Laughing was created in 1998.