Dug North was born in 1970.
you had your garden dug says someone else dug your garden, while you dug your garden says you dug it.
The pioneers in North Dakota and South Dakota burrowed homes or "dug-outs" into the soil. Since most of North Dakota and South Dakota are on the Great Plains, there were very few trees and other materials available for building homes. A dug-out shelter could be quickly dug and made into a home, especially when the settlers had traveled a long distance and needed to build a place to live before the winter storms and cold started.
Past perfect tense - I had dug. Present perfect tense - I have dug. Future perfect tense - I will have dug.
cow dug is stuff
The past tense of "dig" is "dug." For example, "Yesterday, I dug a hole in the garden."
Present perfect is formed with - have/has +past participle.The past participle of dig is dug. So present perfect for dig is have/has dug.They have dug the potatoes. The boys have dug the potatoes.He has dug the potatoes. The farmer has dug the potatoes.
Dug.A:Simple past tense: dug. She really dug that music.The past participle is the same as the past form:present perfect tense: dug. I've dug a well in my backyard.past perfect tense: had dug. He had dug himself down.The use of digged, while not entirely wrong, is now considered archaic.
Richard Everett has written: 'Dig and Dug on the Road (Dig & Dug)' 'Present from the past' 'Dig and Dug on the Building Site (Dig & Dug)'
it was dug by hand or drilled
They dug in the ground and dug in caves
Dig Dug happened in 2600.
Dig Dug was created in 1982.