drank
Drunk is the past participle; drinking is the present participle.
No. It is either a noun or a verb form (to drink). The past participle of drink is used as an adjective with a special connotation (drunk).
Here are some examples of the present form, past form, and past participle form verbs: Present - Past - Past Participle eat - ate - had eaten walk - walked - had walked jog - jogged - had jogged sing - sang - had sung drink - drank - had drunk play - played - had played
infinitive: drink past: drank past participle: drunk
No. Drank is the past tense of drink.
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drunk drink / drank / drunk
The past tense of the verb drink is either drank or drunk. Many people prefer the past tense drank, but drunk is also correct (just unpopular). The word drunk is also a noun, an inebriated person. This example, however, calls for the present perfect tense, because it uses the auxiliary verb "has". The present perfect tense and past perfect tenses call for the past participle form of "drink", and that is "drunk". It is therefore correct to say "has drunk" and "had drunk",
The past tense is drank.
past tense for drink is drank.
The past participle of "drink" is "drunk", not "drank". The correct form of the sentence would be, "Billy has drunk all of his milk."
I think the past tense of drink is either drunk or drank.. But I am not so sure...