If the sentence is:
"You were watching TV when the phone rang."
Then that is correct.
Everyone in the bank, including the manager and the tellers, ran to the door when the alarm rang.
Adjective''loud'' while ''rang'' is an adverb
There was a commotion when the bell rang.
The nouns are bell, end, and class.
RUNG Example : "The Liberty Bell cracked when it was rung in 1753." This is the participle, not the past tense, so correct would be "I rang the bell." *The word wrung exists, as the participle for "wring" as in twisting water from clothes. (see related link for other irregular verbs) rung. although the bell never rang would be more grammatically correct. The bell never rang, the bell was never rung... depends on the context
The phone rang is a clause. It contains a subject ("phone") and a verb ("rang"), which makes it a complete thought or sentence.
Your teacher rang the bell is correct.
my phone rang in a constant pattern.
I was amassing my things when suddenly, the phone rang.
The adverb in the sentence is "loudly," modifying the verb "rang out."
The professor glared at her when her phone rang for the third time.
Everyone in the bank, including the manager and the tellers, ran to the door when the 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.
Lying on the couch when the phone rang, she lethargically reached for it in her drugged stuppor.
The correct sentence is "I didn't hear the phone ring." In this context, "ring" is the correct form to use because it is referring to the action of the phone making a sound (ringing), not the phone itself as an object.
No, the correct past participle of "ring" is "rung." So, it is correct to say "I have rung."
he was ironing when the phone rang.