Hung up i guess
Welcome to Orange answer phone, I'm sorry but the person you called is not available, when you have left your message just hang up or press one at anytime, (BEEP)
Most people will stay on as long as it takes, if they know that someone will pick up. This is why you often have a phone answering system that tells you "There are __ people ahead of you" or "Your approximate wait time is __ minutes." Good muzak also helps - if there is nothing to listen to, people will usually hang up after a minute or two.
i don't know but say this when you prank call sombody: call a phone number in your town and like a neighbor and say to your girl that's a friend and tell her to wait out side with her hands waving in the air and tell the neighbor victom person and tell them to look out side there door accross the street and they might say what they see and you say that's me and your victome might say but she isn't holding a phone by the way the friend could be wearing regular cloths anyway oh it has to be a man victom and when he says what he sees say that's me and he will say but shes not holding a phone then you say lets just say i have a secret then say bye never call this back you never spoke to me wink wink then hang up anyway thx for asking i hope this was helpful to you bye you can email me for more prank call ideas at : (sammierox7@gmail.com)
hang all the blabks people
probably that A- he wants you to hang out with him or B- He is really wondering what you are up too
Hung-up the phone.
This term simply means to have a host phone. About every telephone conversation contains a hosted phone system. When one hangs up, it will automatically hang up the other one's phone as well.
The future tense of the word "hang" is "will hang."
"Hang" is the present tense. The past tense would be "hung".
The past tense of "hang out" is "hung out."
It means to hang up!
The past tense of "hung up" is "hung up." For example, "I hung up the phone yesterday."
If you are talking on your phone, and before you hang up, you hear a click sound, and your friend is still on the phone, then someone was eavesdropping on your conversation and hung up.
"Hung" is the past tense of "hang" when referring to something being suspended or attached, while "hang" is the present tense. Just remember that "hung" is used when talking about something that has already been placed in a suspended position.
The past tense of hang-up is hung-up.
Hung out
The past tense of "hang" is "hung" when referring to suspending something. Example: I hung the picture on the wall. If referring to someone's death by hanging, then the past tense is "hanged." Example: The criminal was hanged for his crimes.