Of course not.
It may be (a swung hammer, a swung fist). Swung is the irregular past tense and past participle of the verb to swing.
I swung on the swing set.
Swung is the past tense of swing, not swang, as some people believe.I swung on the swing.I have swung on the swing.
I Swung the Election was created in 1939.
yes.Jane swung on the swings yesterday.Chad is swinging now.
Yes, because it has a subject (he) and a verb (swung)
The past participle of "swing" is "swung."
No. Powerfully is an adverb of manner, which is used to describe how an action is performed. For example you could say: "He swung the axe powerfully" which means the same as "He swung the axe in a powerful way(or manner)." Adverbs of manner generally go at the end of the clause or after the verb, but they can be placed directly before the main verb in a passive construction (e.g., He was powerfully buffeted by the wind."
He swung
Swung is already in the past tense. It's the past tense of swing.
"Had his foot not gotten caught in the pneumatic hose, he would have fallen to a certain death, but now the upside down, dangling roofer swung to and fro from the eave, hollering for help."
yes