Yes, gotten is a word. It is the past participle of get, although its usage seems limited to the United States. In England, they use got instead.
?
I am going to go by the office today. I do not have good credit so this will be a test, I will let you know tomorrow. In the meantime I also would like to know if anyone has gotten an approval.
the factory has gotten bigger, prices have gone up and the population has raised.
I feel really bad for you if this happened to you. You need to go and get another money order. :(
Due to the mass overflow of orders in the Dinar and the fact that something is about to break in it soon, it is taking longer to ship out orders but you will get is. Mine took 5 weeks.
You can apply for anything you like. You may not get it, if you've just gotten three others.
it depends on what you're using the word for. if you say 'I had gotten a new camera', then no it isn't a word. :) hope this helped
an Americanism
No, gotten is primarily American. Got is mostly used in Britain.
An anothet word for have is.................. gotten brought boughtgot
There are no prefix for gotten because the WORD "GOT" is a rootword so definicially there are no answer for that question:)
gotten
proper
gotten harnen lou'Heiterkeit
swag
The word gotten is a word and this is the dictionary meaning:gotten |ˈgätn|past participle of get .USAGE As past participles of get, the words got andgotten both date back to Middle English. In NorthAmerican English, got and gotten are not identical in use. Gotten usually implies the process of obtaining something ( : he has gotten two tickets for the show, whilegot implies the state of possession or ownership ( : he hasn't got any money).
booty
It has 2 syllables. Got-ten.