Yes it is, if you are illiterate. Would you say, "I puck in the window?"
Yes, "snuck" is commonly used as the past participle of the verb "sneak" in informal English, although some dictionaries also list "sneaked" as an option.
The past participle of "sneak" is "snuck" in American English. In British English, the past participle can also be "sneaked."
The past tense of "sneak" is "sneaked" or "snuck," and the past participle is also "sneaked" or "snuck." Both forms are commonly used in English.
sneakedsneak, sneaked, sneaked.She sneaks around every night.She sneaked past us last night.She has sneaked past us many times now.
The present tense is sneak/sneaks.The past tense is sneaked. (Snuck is often used in American English)The future tense is will sneak.
The past tense of "sneak" is "sneaked" or "snuck," and the present tense is "sneaks."
The past tense of "sneak" is "sneaked" or "snuck," and the past participle is also "sneaked" or "snuck." Both forms are commonly used in English.
Snuck or sneaked. Choose one!!
The correct past tense of "sneak" is "sneaked." Another accepted past tense form is "snuck," but "sneaked" is more commonly used in formal writing.
The past participle of "sneak" is "snuck" in American English. In British English, the past participle can also be "sneaked."
They spell "snuck" (variant past tense of sneak).
The proper past tense for the word "sneak" is "sneaked."
The present tense is sneak/sneaks.The past tense is sneaked. (Snuck is often used in American English)The future tense is will sneak.
The word 'snuck' refers to moving in a stealthy or secretive manner. The term 'snuck' is often used as a past tense variation on the word 'sneak', commonly used in the UK and US
The past tense of sneak is sneaked, according to the AP style guide. Snuck is becoming more popular and may supplant "sneaked" but not officially....thus far. sneaked Due to common usage, the dictionary now lists the rather vulgar snuck as an option, but sneaked is the original past tense form.
sneaked. snuk is a bit more "folksy"
yes it is look in the dictionaryI don't think so.... this is from "everything grammar"...Speaking of sneaking, maybe that's how the word snuck got into the dictionary; I can't think of any other reason for it to be there.Although snuck is used fairly widely, the correct past tense and past participle of sneak is sneaked. (Pittsburgh sneaked in last year. Pittsburghhas sneaked in for the last several years.) Snuck was considered to be non-standard English when people started to mistakenly use it, which, we're told, was in the late 19th century; instead of correcting it through education, it spread and has now become so entrenched in our language that many well-respected writers and speakers use it and think that it's correct.
sneakedsneak, sneaked, sneaked.She sneaks around every night.She sneaked past us last night.She has sneaked past us many times now.