Since, the running is already completed it should be 'total miles ran'.
The correct phrase is "total miles run." In this context, "run" is being used as a past participle of the verb "to run" to describe the action of running.
The past tense is 'ran'. The past participle is 'run', so the past perfect (pluperfect) tense is 'had run'. 'I ran three miles yesterday.' 'I had run twenty miles over the previous week.' 'I ran that training course last year.' 'The course had been run many times before.' (this is passive past perfect). Jack had run the course many times. (active past perfect) NEVER 'have ran' or 'had ran'. Those constructions do not exist in English.
"Run" is the present tense form of the verb, used when referring to something happening now or regularly. "Ran" is the past tense form of the verb, used when referring to something that happened in the past. For example, "I run every day" (present tense) and "Yesterday, I ran five miles" (past tense).
The past tense of "run" is "ran."
"Is run" is correct. "Is ran" is not grammatically correct.
The present tense of "ran" is "run."
570 miles!
You ran 1.6777 miles
You ran about 3/4 of a mile (0.7456 miles).
Suppose the two who ran the same amount ran s miles each. The third person ran s - 8 miles So the total miles run is s + s + (s - 8) = 3s - 8 Now 3s - 8 = 64 So 3s = 64 + 8 = 72 So s = 72/3 = 24 The third person ran s - 8 = 24 - 8 = 16 miles.
2.5 miles + d miles = number of miles chaz ran
7.4 hundred thousand miles he ran through a tube and out your boob
12
he ran 150 miles.
5 miles
He ran 4.5 miles.
He ran 196416 inches.
Steve ran 11 miles