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The dictionaries I looked at used "sting, stung, stung" (such as "the bee stung me yesterday").
They can die if you don't treat them by putting wet mud from a spruce on the sting
Stung. e.g. The bee has stung me.
Yes, "sting" is the present tense form of the verb. It can also be used as a noun to refer to a sharp, burning pain.
Sting
sting
It can be (a stung beekeeper, stung pride). It is the past participle of the verb to sting, and is otherwise a verb.
It depends on how bad the sting was...and the dog's reaction to the sting
i have got stung by one! sting realy bad!
yes i was stung
No. "Stung" is the past tense of the verb "sting". It could rarely be used as an adjective (e.g. the stung students were taken to the hospital).
You don't always get stung. I handle bees regularly and very rarely get stung.