In the world of technology, where a script is a snippet or more of computer code, the proper grammar is: The script was run, or the script ran.
No. It should be either "You have run a marathon" or "You ran a marathon".
You could have run longer.The reason is:"Ran" is the simple past tense: "Yesterday I ran all the way home.""Run" is the past participle: "You should have run." "The race has been run."
It depends what sentence you are using it in. If it is future tense, then it will be run. If it is past tense, then it will be ran.
The word is spelled run, just as you spelled it. I ran. You ran. He/she/it ran. I run. You run.
This is a present perfect verb form. Present perfect is have/has + past participleThe past participle of run is the same - run. So you have run is correct --- or he has run
"Is run" is correct. "Is ran" is not grammatically correct.
"Will be run": the verb "run" is its own past participle.
Had run is correct.
No, ran.
No, the correct past tense form of "run" in this case is "was ran" or "were running."
infinitive: run past: ran past participle: run "You have run" is correct.
No, "got ran over" is not correct. The appropriate phrase is "got run over," as "run" is the past participle of "to run." The correct usage maintains proper grammatical structure in passive constructions.
No, the correct past-tense form of run is ran. "Runed" is not a valid past tense form for this verb.
The proper grammar is "report was run."
Have run is the correct present perfect tense. Perfect tenses are created with past participles, and the past participle of run is run.
The correct English grammar would be 'I should have run'.
The correct form is "will be run." In this construction, the verb "run" is in the past participle form, which is used with "will be" to form the future passive voice.