No. "I have rung" or "I rang" would be correct.
The past tense of "to ring" is "rang," so you say "I rang the doorbell" or "I have rung the doorbell many times."
The correct past participle form of "ring" is "rung." Therefore, the correct question should be: "Has the warning bell rung yet?"
The correct phrase is "has rung." "Rang" is the past tense of "ring," while "rung" is the past participle form that should be used with "has" in present perfect tense.
The adverb in the sentence is out, modifying the verb rang (rang how, rang out).
"Rang" is the past tense of "ring."
No. The correct way to say it would be, "when midnight was rung in."
The past tense of "to ring" is "rang," so you say "I rang the doorbell" or "I have rung the doorbell many times."
If the sentence is: "You were watching TV when the phone rang." Then that is correct.
Your teacher rang the bell is correct.
The correct phrase is "the bell has rung." In this context, "rung" is the past participle of the verb "ring." The phrase "the bell has rang" is incorrect because "rang" is the simple past tense of the verb, not the past participle.
rang
rang
The correct past participle form of "ring" is "rung." Therefore, the correct question should be: "Has the warning bell rung yet?"
just sound it out in English... sa- rang.. like sah-Ron... to say i love you... you use sa rang hae or to be formal u say sa rang hae yo... they mostly say sa rang hae, sa rang hae yo or sarang hamida sa rang hae--sah-Ron-heh it similar to word Ron... but a bit different tone... sa rang hae yo-- sah-Ron-heh-your (kinda simil;ar but drop the r sound) *don't say it like yo yo... that's wrong... say it like how you would say paul that aw sound Sa-rang-hamida-- sa-Ron-hah-me-dah
Burst, I believe, is correct.
"You Rang?"
The correct phrase is "has rung." "Rang" is the past tense of "ring," while "rung" is the past participle form that should be used with "has" in present perfect tense.