"She was awakened" is more commonly used and sounds more formal or literary compared to "she was woken." Both are correct and can be used interchangeably.
Awakened or woken for sleep.
No! The correct form is : They will be awakened at dawn.
It is "Could have awakened."
Yes, chiefly in Britain. In America many prefer would have wakened or awakened.
Yes, but. Woken, as the past participle of wake, is chiefly British. Not exactly sub-standard in America, but unusual. As a medical transcriptionist of some 30 years, I have always changed the dictator's (usually a doctor) verbiage. Example: Dictator: The patient was woken up from general anesthesia. Typed: The patient was awakened from general anesthesia. Never had a report been returned to me as incorrect because of this change.
The senstance should read "Has he woken up yet?" The verb takes the past tense. It can also be "Has he awakened?"
Awoken most certainly is a word; it comes from the old English verb "awake" and it means woken up, or made awake. The correct usage is anywhere that it could be replaced by "woken up". 'awoken' is the passive voice form of 'awoke' (past tense of the verb 'awake'). for instance, you can say "I awoke to the sound of dogs barking" or "I was awoken by the sound of dogs barking". in modern US English, awoken is a bit archaic - normally we'd say 'awakened' instead.
There is 1 in woken
Wake up is the correct way of saying it. Example- Tomorrow I will wake up.Non-example- Tomorrow I will wakes up.
dyno is gt technicly but dyno was only made for afew years and they didnt perfect it i have one i love it but name brand gts' are better
My best guess... He was awakened. It's not a case of either/or. They are both correct, as they are the past participles of two different verbs: 'to awaken' and 'to wake up'. You could also say: 'He was awoken' (past participle of 'to awake'); 'He was woken' (past participle of 'to wake' - without the 'up'); 'He was wakened (past participle of 'to waken'); 'He was wakened up' (past participle of 'to waken up'). None of them is incorrect grammar. They convey subtle distinctions of meaning, and which of them you use depends on context, preference, degree of formality required, and other criteria.
Woken does not mean anything in German, the English word woken, means aufgewacht in German