It depends on how you say it. See you can say "Aw, my boat sank!" but you can also say "Hey your boat sunk, too!"
No, the correct phrase is "he sank a putt." "Sunk" is often considered incorrect when referring to sinking a putt in golf.
It should be "sank," which is the past tense of "sink." "Sunk" is the past participle, which is used with an auxiliary verb, e.g., "He had not sunk a well before."
present - sink past - sank past participle - sunk
The past tense of "sink" is "sank" and the past participle is "sunk."
The word sink can be used as an intransitive verb, the verb form doesn't change the word.
No, the correct phrase is "he sank a putt." "Sunk" is often considered incorrect when referring to sinking a putt in golf.
Cinq (as 'sunk').
It should be "sank," which is the past tense of "sink." "Sunk" is the past participle, which is used with an auxiliary verb, e.g., "He had not sunk a well before."
No one sunk the Titanic. It hit an iceberg and sank.
sunk
SUNK
15 April 1912
Sank is the past tense of sink. The past participle is sunk.
present - sink past - sank past participle - sunk
Titanic sunk in the North Atlantic Ocean.
Titanic sunk at night in the ocean.
No, the Titanic sunk after striking an iceberg.