The Answer is 'they drank' drank is the past tense of 'To Drink'. Whereas 'Drunk' has the meaning of being intoxicated, usually by alcohol.
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.
can be drunk
The past participle of "drink" is "drunk", not "drank". The correct form of the sentence would be, "Billy has drunk all of his milk."
No. Its: Billy has drunk all his milk.
For the present tense verb "drink", the simple past is "drank" and the past participle is "drunk". If this past participle is part of a verb phrase, it always appears with some auxiliary verb. However, the participle is often used as an adjective, as in the sentence, "That man is drunk." If "is drunk" were interpreted with "drunk" as part of the verb, it would mean that something else is drinking the man, a very unlikely occurrence! In contrast, "All the milk was drunk" does mean that something else drank the milk. Therefore, in that sentence, "drunk" is functioning as part of the verb phrase "was drunk", the past tense in the passive voice. "Was" is the auxiliary verb. "Drinked" is never correct outside quotation marks!
You drank milk today.
I drank a litre of milk yesterday.
Yesterday I 'drank' three gallons of milk I just drank a whole bottle of vimto My dog just drank some of her water from the metal bowl :)
A. What's that you are drinking? B. Chocolate milk. It's delicious. I have drunk three cups already. A. Can I have some? Is the sentence right?
Milk... Milk ...milk...
From. See the link below.
You use it similarly to "except." Example: we drank just about every beverage other than milk.