Not even close.
The past tense of the verb drink is either drank or drunk. Many people prefer the past tense drank, but drunk is also correct (just unpopular). The word drunk is also a noun, an inebriated person. This example, however, calls for the present perfect tense, because it uses the auxiliary verb "has". The present perfect tense and past perfect tenses call for the past participle form of "drink", and that is "drunk". It is therefore correct to say "has drunk" and "had drunk",
The correct way to say the sentence is "They drank their milk." "Drunk" is the past participle of "drink" and should not be used in this context.
If you put a question mark after it I think it is.
The past participle of "drink" is "drunk", not "drank". The correct form of the sentence would be, "Billy has drunk all of his milk."
The Answer is 'they drank' drank is the past tense of 'To Drink'. Whereas 'Drunk' has the meaning of being intoxicated, usually by alcohol.
negative
can be drunk
Grammatically correct: "Drank" sodium water... and NO YOU DIDN'T!! Sodium catches fire and typically EXPLODES... that is to say, thee is a strong chemical reaction between the H2O and pure sodium.
Intoxicated
The correct phrase is "we have not drunk in a long time." "Drank" is the simple past tense of "drink," while "drunk" is the past participle, which is used with auxiliary verbs like "have."
No drunk means inebriated which you can't do to someone.
They finally had to toss the drunk out into the street.