No this is not grammatical. The correct phrase is "did he wake up?"
Yes there really is a word such as woken up for example, "She has woken up!"
they like to be woken up by the sound of the oven's alarm.
"aufgewacht" is an adjective, it's English equivalents are "woken", "woken up" and "awake".
Odysseus is woken up on Phaeacia by the sound of Nausicaa and her handmaidens playing games near the river.
It is "Could have awakened."
no its got woken up
When someone is not woken up easily.
There is 1 in woken
Yes, but. Woken, as the past participle of wake, is chiefly British. Not exactly sub-standard in America, but unusual. As a medical transcriptionist of some 30 years, I have always changed the dictator's (usually a doctor) verbiage. Example: Dictator: The patient was woken up from general anesthesia. Typed: The patient was awakened from general anesthesia. Never had a report been returned to me as incorrect because of this change.
Yes cuz that means you are fat. And as you know when you are fat you are fat. So if you are woken up by hunger in the morning you are very fat and that is a bad thing!
its about someone who wants to be woken up
Woken does not mean anything in German, the English word woken, means aufgewacht in German