The third form (past participle) of awake is awaked or awoken.
Awakes
Awaken
Was awake or awoke.
A glass of beer has a head every night but not in the morning. A pillow is another answer to this riddle, as it gains a head when a person goes to sleep at night and loses it when they awake in the morning.
3rd BC
3rd century
270ad was the 3rd century.
"Awaken" is the verb form of "awake."
The present progressive of "awake" is "awaking" or "awakening."
Alcohol in any form should not be your choice of beverage to stay awake.
The past form of the irregular verb "awake" is "awoke."
Awake, awoke, and awoken are all irregular verbs. Awake is the base form, awoke is the past simple and awoken is the past participle form. Some others are be, was, were and been.
The noun form of the verb to awaken is the gerund, awakening.
Conjugation in English is regular in all but a few verbs. Problems are usually in the principal parts. Principal parts of to awake ( a weakened, intransitive form of to awaken) are: awake, awaking, awoke, awoken. Awaked is rare.
Sceptile is Treekos 3rd Evolve form Steel-Cobra
awake
No, the word 'awake' is a verb (awake, awakes, awaking, awoke or awoken) and an adjective (awake, more awake, most awake). The adjective 'awake' is most often functions as a predicate adjective following a linking verb.Examples:I often awake on a day off at the time the alarm rings on a workday. (verb)They were awake and ready when I arrived. (adjective)
I was awake at midnight The baby was awake playing in her crib. I feel more awake when I drink coffee.
No. Awake is an adjective. A related adverb is wakefully.