Yes, that's a complete sentence. Maybe somebody you really want to hear from will call tomorrow.
No, the sentence is missing a subject. A correct version would be: "My phone hasn't rung all day."
The squirrel leaped from rung to rung on the ladder to reach the bird feeder hanging from the tree.
"Already" is the adverb in the sentence. It modifies the verb "rung" by indicating that the bell had rung before a specific point in time.
The word "rung" is used as the past participle of the verb "ring," to indicate the act of sounding a bell or making a ringing sound. For example, "He rung the doorbell to announce his arrival."
The adverb in the sentence is "already." It modifies the verb "rung" to indicate that the action of the bell ringing occurred before the specified time.
The word "rung" is used to refer to a step on a ladder or a level of a hierarchy. For example, "She climbed up the ladder and reached the top rung" or "He has climbed up the corporate ladder and reached a high rung in the company."
He rung the doorbell.
The squirrel leaped from rung to rung on the ladder to reach the bird feeder hanging from the tree.
The word "rung" is used as the past participle of the verb "ring," to indicate the act of sounding a bell or making a ringing sound. For example, "He rung the doorbell to announce his arrival."
The adverb in the sentence is "already." It modifies the verb "rung" to indicate that the action of the bell ringing occurred before the specified time.
I had to finish my testfusillade before the bell rung.
The word "rung" is used to refer to a step on a ladder or a level of a hierarchy. For example, "She climbed up the ladder and reached the top rung" or "He has climbed up the corporate ladder and reached a high rung in the company."
The example provided is a complex sentence because it contains one dependent clause (after it stopped raining) and one independent clause (The bell rung four times).
The college bell was rung to summon students back to classes after a recess.
The past tense of "ring" when referring to a bell or doorbell is "rang." For the act of making a phone call, the past tense is "called," not "rung."
The homophone for "wrong" is "rung."
Your teacher rang the bell is correct.
rung