yeh cant fink of anyfin else u cud say
The answer is "How much water have you drunk today?" This is because it is the past participle version of "drink". The word "drank" can be used when referring to only the past version of "drink".
Drank.
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).
It can be. It is the past participle of to drink but as a adjective means inebriated by alcohol (drunk driver).
The water was purified before they drank it. Purified water is the only water they drink.
The past participle of "drink" is "drunk", not "drank". The correct form of the sentence would be, "Billy has drunk all of his milk."
The correct way to say the sentence is "They drank their milk." "Drunk" is the past participle of "drink" and should not be used in this context.
Drunk is the past participle of drink. The simple past tense is drank.
infinitive: drink past: drank past participle: drunk
No. Our Drink. We drank. He drank, she drank, and then we all got drunk.
For the present tense verb "drink", the simple past is "drank" and the past participle is "drunk". If this past participle is part of a verb phrase, it always appears with some auxiliary verb. However, the participle is often used as an adjective, as in the sentence, "That man is drunk." If "is drunk" were interpreted with "drunk" as part of the verb, it would mean that something else is drinking the man, a very unlikely occurrence! In contrast, "All the milk was drunk" does mean that something else drank the milk. Therefore, in that sentence, "drunk" is functioning as part of the verb phrase "was drunk", the past tense in the passive voice. "Was" is the auxiliary verb. "Drinked" is never correct outside quotation marks!
The correct phrase is "we have not drunk in long time."
DRANK. He drinks 8 glasses of water every day. (Present) He drank 8 glasses of water yesterday. (Past) Do not confuse it with DRUNK which is a participle form and should be preceded by the word: has or have drunk (for present perfect tense) or had drunk (for past perfect tense) or will/shall have drunk (future perfect tense).
drunk is the past participle of drink. drink drank drunk. I have drunk the medicine.
You drank milk today.
Drunk or drank. Correction: "drank" is past, "drunk" is past participle. However, "drunk" now also means "intoxicated" or "inebriated" (the state of having had too much alcohol to drink). Thus, many people avoid "drunk" because it "sounds bad". It is, nevertheless, correct. The same problem occurs with swim. Although many people avoid it, the correct past participle is "swum". (swim, swam, swum)
Drink, drank, drunk are all verbs. The past participle, drunk, can be used as an adjective. Example: I can't believe you are drunk right now!