The phone rang is a clause. It contains a subject ("phone") and a verb ("rang"), which makes it a complete thought or sentence.
We jumped out of bed when the alarm rang. The kids went out for recess when the bell rang. She woke up from her nap when the phone rang. When Grandma rang the dinner bell, we all rushed to the table. When the fire alarm rang, we left the building.
The correct phrase is "has rung." "Rang" is the past tense of "ring," while "rung" is the past participle form that should be used with "has" in present perfect tense.
Yes, a comma is typically used after a phrase that starts with "when" if it comes at the beginning of a sentence. For example: "When the bell rang, the students rushed out of the classroom."
Verbs do not have passive forms, verbs combine with beverbs to form passive verb phrases. Passive verb phrases are formed with - be + past participle.For ring (rang is the past form of ring) the past participle is rung so a passive verb phrase could be - is rung, are rung, was rung, were rung, was being rung.
The past tense of "ring" when referring to a bell or doorbell is "rang." For the act of making a phone call, the past tense is "called," not "rung."
The independent clause is 'When the doorbell rang.' It is an adverbial clause, modifying the verb 'was sleeping'.
he was ironing when the phone rang.
If the sentence is: "You were watching TV when the phone rang." Then that is correct.
Nope!
Nope!
"Dmee shehf duh raw" is the pronunciation of the French phrase demi chef de rang. The translation of the masculine singular prepositional phrase will be "line cook" or "station chef" in regard to the person in question, who is answerable to the head waiter (chef de rang).
The fire alarm rang
We jumped out of bed when the alarm rang. The kids went out for recess when the bell rang. She woke up from her nap when the phone rang. When Grandma rang the dinner bell, we all rushed to the table. When the fire alarm rang, we left the building.
The phone rang while she was ironing
my phone rang in a constant pattern.
age
In school, or at a funeral.