We continually strive to better our service to our customers.
He was a king. He had been Striven to achieve the throne by his uncle.
The past participle of "strive" is "striven" or "strived."
The suggestion that the money he had striven for from youth to age should go to some reprobate foreigner, to pay his gambling-debts, nearly threw him into a convulsion .
Both "has striven" and "has strived" are correct. "Has striven" is more commonly used in formal writing, while "has strived" is acceptable in both formal and informal contexts.
I strive to explain right now. Indeed, I am striving to explain. Yesterday, I strove to explain. In the past, I have striven to explain. If I keep this up for long enough, I will have striven to explain. The verb to strive means, basically, to try. If you noun the verb, an ancient practice that some purists hate despite the fact that we have always done it, the strivers are those who strive, and the striven could be those who have striven or who have been the object of striving. I have never heard the noun phrase "the striven" before.
Both are correct as they are both in the Present Perfect.
Contended with God.
Had striven.
The past participle is "striven".
only smarties have the answer..
69m at it's deepest point.
Strove is already the past tense of strive. The past participle is striven.