The simple past and the past participle of the verb - to bark.
Barked is a regular past tense verb.
A verb is something you do, for example, "run", "jump", etc. "Bark" would be the verb in the sentence, "The dog barked."
The word 'barked' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to bark'. Example sentence:My neighbor's dog barked late into the night.
Barked IS a strong, or active, verb. An active verb shows action. Put it directly beside the noun-subject. The dog barked. The little dog barked as if a rock 'n roll drummer.
yes
NO!!!! An adverb qualifies a verb. e.g. The dog barked loudly. Verb ; barked Adverb ; loudly.
"Barked" is a past-tense verb, of the sound that a dog made.
"Bark", like almost all other verbs in English, has three perfect tenses: "have [or has] barked" is present perfect, "had barked" is past perfect, and "will [or shall] have barked" is future perfect. Some say that "I have barked" is the perfect tense, "I had barked" is the pluperfect.
Barked is a past tense verb. not a noun. a noun is a person place or thing.
Barked is an action verb, the past tense of the verb to bark; to bark is an act. A verb is an action word, not an action noun.
An adverb describes(qualifies) an verb. e.g. The dog barked (No adverb; ) The dog barked loudly ( Adverb).
Barked is the past tense of bark - bark + ed. This means it is a regular verb. The past of all irregular verbs is made by adding -ed