You go up to the boat, avoid the net, and keep biting it a whole bunch of times.
Container Boat
There was more than one boat that sunk, but the sinking of the Lusitania was the biggest.
There is at least one, sunk in the lagoon. The cargo is all over the place and there's no way to fix it anyway. (That's not how to beat the island.)
No. No, the Harpers Ferry boat was never sunk by the North.
The Allies sunk German Uboats. Uboat, not you-boat. Uboats stand for Unterseeboot - undersea boat.
Yes, it is the past tense of the verb sink. My boat may sink today, because my boat sunk yesterday. I need a new boat.
"Sank" is the simple past tense of "sink" (e.g. "The ship sank"). "Sunk" is the past participle form (e.g. "The ship has sunk").
The simple past for "sink" is "sank."Ex. The boat sank.However, the past participle (and thus the form used in the more complex forms of the past tense) is "sunk."Ex. The boat had sunk ten years ago. The boat will have sunk by the time you read this. The boat wouldn't have sunk if it hadn't had a hole in it. I have finally sunk the boat.A full list of all forms can be found here: http://www.vocabulix.com/conjugation2/sink.html
after the German u-boat sunk the lusitana which sunk 128 Americans
Britain's Lusitania was sunk by Germany
Big valley
It sunk in 1942