not many, maybe even none because they keep on adding new ones like geocaching. And the tracking and signaling has been brought back for only a year or so. My educated guess is people have gotten it, but lost it because there are new ones
No, gotten is primarily American. Got is mostly used in Britain.
They might have gotten shot.
Natives from the west, and attack by a European power. Also, they had to figure out their economy as a new country that was in debt when it was formed and hasn't gotten out of it since.
I have used them multiple times. I have gotten good fares with no problem on major American / European carriers.
About 40%, they've gotten really good at jumping the border.
The past participle of "get" is "gotten" (American English) The past participle in British English is generally "got"
Both ever got and ever gotten are past participle conjugations of the verb to get. Gotis the British English (BE) form and gotten is the American English (AE) form.A past participle indicates past or completed action or time, e.g. (BE) Have you ever got goose-bumps from watching a scary movie? (AE) Have you ever gotten goose-bumps from watching a scary movie?Ever got or ever gotten would only be used as part of a question.Although gotten is no longer in usage in British English as a verb conjugation it still exits in the adjective ill-gotten, e.g. ill-gotten gains.
The French Revolution is most likely to be compared to the American Revolution because the French peasants had gotten the idea of the American's Constitution and the idea of rebelling from the leader.
her sibling were guelma,daniel read,mary,eliza(died at age2),AND JACOB MERRITT AND THE DAD WAS DANIEL ANTHONY.
Of all the European peoples, the French have gotten along with & conducted business with American Indians, and Asians the most.
Because the Mexicans had already gotten (stolen from the Indians) the land that the Americans were now stealing from the Mexicans.
It is both. The forms are: get got got. In American English the past participle is gotten.