The idiom "her name rang a bell" means that the name mentioned seems familiar or triggers a memory, but the person may not recall the exact details about who or what it refers to. It suggests a sense of recognition without a clear recollection.
The homophone pair for "informed" and "rang bell" is "knowed" and "knelled."
A homophone for "informed" is "enformed," and a homophone for "rang bell" is "wrang belle."
We jumped out of bed when the alarm rang. The kids went out for recess when the bell rang. She woke up from her nap when the phone rang. When Grandma rang the dinner bell, we all rushed to the table. When the fire alarm rang, we left the building.
"Rang" is the past tense of the verb "ring." For example, "She rang the bell to signal the start of the event."
"Bell bellowed" means that the sound of a bell was loud and resonant, with a deep and powerful tone. It suggests that the bell made a deep, booming noise that could be heard over a significant distance.
It means that something seems familiar, but you can't quite bring it to mind. The image is of a bell ringing in the distance. You might say "the name rings a bell" when you know you are familiar with someone, but you can't really remember them clearly.
Idiomatically, to ring a bell is to remind someone of something. Here is an example. She was wearing a dress with purple flowers on it; does that ring a bell? Oh yes, I remember her now.It means that you vaguely remember something, but not the exact details. For example, if someone mentioned a person's name and you remembered that you had heard that name before, but you didn't remember the person, you would say "Her name rings a bell." Also "to ring someone's bell" means to hit them in the head, knock them out - alluding to boxing.If something "rang a bell", it means that it sounded familiar.
I dont no the name but there were 2 watch men standing in the watch tower and 1 of those men rang the bell.
She rang the school bell. The were able to bell the cat.
Ding Dong Who Rang the Bell was created in 1972.
The homophone pair for "informed" and "rang bell" is "knowed" and "knelled."
Your teacher rang the bell is correct.
bchanderdatt@yahoo.com
Philadelphia, PA
The verb tenses are ring, rang, rung. You would use the third form , the Participle. My teacher asked me to ring the bell. I rang the bell. The final bell has rung. When the final bell rung, the teacher said to never ring the bell again because it rang too loud and it rung too long.
We jumped out of bed when the alarm rang. The kids went out for recess when the bell rang. She woke up from her nap when the phone rang. When Grandma rang the dinner bell, we all rushed to the table. When the fire alarm rang, we left the building.
When the Fire Bell Rang - 1915 was released on: USA: 23 March 1915