Hyperventilating knockout or chocking game
The past tense of "knock" is "knocked".
knocked
knock can be a noun - he suffered a knock and can also be a verb - you knock on my door
Knocked
Yes,it has eg:knock,nock knock,knocked.....i think I'm rgt,but not perfectly....
It can actually be used as both.Noun - For example: "I heard a knock at my door"Verb - To knock. For example: "I knocked on the door"
In boxing, K.O. Stands for knock out. Being knocked unconscious.
he knock out in episode 15
Yes, "knock" can function as a transitive verb when it takes a direct object, as in "She knocked the door." However, it can also be used intransitively without a direct object, as in "He knocked." The transitive usage is more common when specifying what is being knocked.
KO Means knocked out
A rule requiring that a boxer who is knocked down three times in the same round be declared knocked out
It was back in caveman days, when one of them knocked another over the head with a club. "Knock knock." "Who's there?" "Grog." "Grog who?" "Grog crack skull, take cave and woman!"You had to be there.Knock knock your face?