Yes, lighted is a correct tense of light. Lit is also acceptable.
Both "lit" and "lighted" are acceptable past tense forms of the verb "light." However, "lit" is more commonly used in everyday language.
The past tense of "light" is "lit" or "lighted," and the past participle is also "lit" or "lighted."
The past tense of the verb "light" is "lit" or "lighted."
The past tense of "light" is "lit" or "lighted" - both are accepted spellings.
The past tense of the verb "to light up" is "lit up" or "lighted up."
Yes, both "lit" and "lighted" are acceptable as the past tense of the verb "light".
Both "lit" and "lighted" are acceptable past tense forms of the verb "light." However, "lit" is more commonly used in everyday language.
The past tense of "light" is "lit" or "lighted," and the past participle is also "lit" or "lighted."
The past tense of the verb "light" is "lit" or "lighted."
lighted
Lit.
The past tense of "light" is "lit" or "lighted" - both are accepted spellings.
The past tense of the verb "to light up" is "lit up" or "lighted up."
The past participle of "light" is "lit" or "lighted." Both are acceptable forms.
The past tense of the word "light" is "lit" when referring to illuminating something. However, "light" can also be used as a regular verb with the past tense "lighted" when referring to lighting a fire or candle.
The technically correct answer to your question is "lighted." The past participle form for regular verbs are the same thing as past tense. Light is technically a regular verb, so therefore you would use a past participle form (adding ed, d, t,) to the base form to come up with the past participle (past tense). However, English is a living language and relational words (nouns, adverbs, adjectives, verbs) have the ability to change form and meaning over time due to popular acceptance, culture, etc. so another acceptable and commonly used form for the past tense of light is "lit." The ability to use both lighted and lit correctly essentially makes the verb "light" both a regular and irregular verb at the same time.
If you are using light as a verb (i.e. to light a candle, to light a subject) the past tense is "lit." For example: "I lit the candles for dinner." or "I lit the woman before taking the photo."