Drunk is the past participle; drinking is the present participle.
No. It is either a noun or a verb form (to drink). The past participle of drink is used as an adjective with a special connotation (drunk).
Here are some examples of the present form, past form, and past participle form verbs: Present - Past - Past Participle eat - ate - had eaten walk - walked - had walked jog - jogged - had jogged sing - sang - had sung drink - drank - had drunk play - played - had played
infinitive: drink past: drank past participle: drunk
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No. Drank is the past tense of drink.
drunk drink / drank / drunk
The past tense is drank.
The past participle of "drink" is "drunk", not "drank". The correct form of the sentence would be, "Billy has drunk all of his milk."
I think the past tense of drink is either drunk or drank.. But I am not so sure...
past tense for drink is drank.
The past participle used with "drunk" is "drunk." For example, "He has drunk too much."