has rung
No, the correct past participle of "ring" is "rung." So, it is correct to say "I have rung."
The past perfect tense of "rang" is "had rung".
Verbs do not have passive forms, verbs combine with beverbs to form passive verb phrases. Passive verb phrases are formed with - be + past participle.For ring (rang is the past form of ring) the past participle is rung so a passive verb phrase could be - is rung, are rung, was rung, were rung, was being rung.
The past tense of "ring" is "rang" and the past participle is "rung."
The correct past participle form of "ring" is "rung." Therefore, the correct question should be: "Has the warning bell rung yet?"
No, the correct past participle of "ring" is "rung." So, it is correct to say "I have rung."
The past perfect tense of "rang" is "had rung".
Verbs do not have passive forms, verbs combine with beverbs to form passive verb phrases. Passive verb phrases are formed with - be + past participle.For ring (rang is the past form of ring) the past participle is rung so a passive verb phrase could be - is rung, are rung, was rung, were rung, was being rung.
rang
Past tense for rung is rang
RUNG
The past tense of "ring" is "rang" and the past participle is "rung."
The correct past participle form of "ring" is "rung." Therefore, the correct question should be: "Has the warning bell rung yet?"
The past participle of "ring" is "rung."
Had is a past tense, which means it happened before (eg Sally had rung the doorbell) rang counts as a present tense (eg Sally rang the doorbell) The appropriate word for "had" would be "had rung" which is past tense.
The past tense of "to ring" is "rang," so you say "I rang the doorbell" or "I have rung the doorbell many times."
The alarm rang earlier than usual. The bell has rung numerous times throughout the day.