As I walked passed the post office I was stung by a bee.
NO. YOU CAN SAY walked by or passed by
Being stung by a bee hurts with extreme pain, and can last for a while.
They do, and it hurts extremely bad, they will die when you get stung, if you get stung care for it right away because it may have poison.
They certainly do but they try and avoid it if they can.
Believe me, they try! But if they did, they would get stung in their mouth. If your dog hasn't gotten stung in the mouth, then its never eaten a bumble bee. :]
small dog stung on he's lip by yellow jacket yesterday how do i treat him gave him half a benodryal but still weak
No, it looks like you did not use the correct verb. You probably meant to say that a bee stung you yesterday, and that (A bee stung me yesterday) would be correct. Although there is a slang usage for "skunk" as a verb, the past tense is "skunked". Also, since "to skunk" means "to defeat thoroughly", it would not make sense for a bee to skunk you.
he was stung right in the chest he was stung by a sting ray when he was swimming looking for wounder full water animal's the time he got to the hospital his breathing stopped and he passed away . so yes he's dead
Stung Treng Province's population is 111,734.
The dictionaries I looked at used "sting, stung, stung" (such as "the bee stung me yesterday").
they die after they got stung
No
No. The venom from the tracker jacker is known to cause hallucinations and searing pain. She was overcome by the venom, so that's why she passed out
It can be (a stung beekeeper, stung pride). It is the past participle of the verb to sting, and is otherwise a verb.
I got stung by the bee.
Stung. e.g. The bee has stung me.
"Stung" is not an adverb, it is the past participle form of the verb "sting." It can be used as a verb or as part of the passive voice in a sentence.
I Got Stung was created on 1958-10-21.