My dress has torn, exposing my bra.
My pants have torn along the seam in the back.
The insolent youngster has torn pages out of the library book.
Religious zealots have torn all the nude drawings from art books.
Torn may be used as a verb (such as in the sentence "I have torn the paper") or as an adjective ("The paper is torn").
Asunder means "Torn to pieces". An example of the proper way to use asunder would be:The wreckage is believed to be that of a British vessel that was torn asunder by a deadly storm almost a hundred years ago. (Merriam-Webster Online)
The man had a perforated bowel which spilled infection into his peritoneal cavity.
.. how can use scrum in a sentence
How to use foundation in a sentence
Change your shirt; that one is torn.
Torn may be used as a verb (such as in the sentence "I have torn the paper") or as an adjective ("The paper is torn").
The damage from the storm was chiefly torn and broken tree limbs.
You would use 'sunder' when referring to something which has been broken or torn apart in a violent manner. It is often used poetically in phrases such as 'Lightning rent the sky and the dark clouds were torn a sunder.'
'torn out' is two words. it is correct if you put it into a sentence... for example if you say 'My heart is torn out' as a metaphore. Torn out on its own does not make sense
Due to several torn ligaments the woman lost use of her arm.
The word 'socks' is the plural of 'sock'. Therefore it takes a plural verb: 'The socks were torn.'
The subject of the sentence, "One of the shingles was torn." is one (one was torn).The noun 'shingles' is the object of the preposition 'of'.
My paper is torn!
We will set sail in the morning.The sail has torn.
During the freak storm the mainmast was torn terribly, the ship was going to be stranded on the rocks if they don't fix it quickly.
Asunder means "Torn to pieces". An example of the proper way to use asunder would be:The wreckage is believed to be that of a British vessel that was torn asunder by a deadly storm almost a hundred years ago. (Merriam-Webster Online)