No, it is a verb form (to shake) or an adjective. The noun is shake.
The word 'shaken' is the past participle of the verb to shake (shakes, shaking, shaken). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun. Examples: Verb: He had shaken his soda so that it sprayed in his face when he opened the can. Adjective: The shaken woman was able to give the officer a good description of the purse-snatcher.
Shaken Ajmanov's birth name is Ajmanov, Shaken Kenzhetayevich.
The present perfect forms are have shaken and has shaken.Examples:They have shaken everything up. (plural subject)She has shaken everything up. (singular subject)
Will have been shaken. Will have shaken.
Shaken itself is past tense of shake!
Present perfect is formed with - have/has + past participleThe past participle of shake is shaken so present perfect is have shaken or has shaken.We have shaken the dice.She has shaken her cage.
The lady was visibly shaken when that song started.James Bond likes his martini shaken, not stirred.
Shaken baby syndrome is also known as abusive head trauma, shaken brain trauma, pediatric traumatic brain injury , whiplash shaken infant syndrome, and shaken impact syndrome.
shaken shake/shook/shaken
Shaken Niyazbekov was born in 1938.
"had shaken" is the correct option.
The past participle of "shook" is "shaken." For example, "The earthquake had shaken the entire city."