Yes, that's a complete sentence. Maybe somebody you really want to hear from will call tomorrow.
the bell rung indicating that church has started.
"Already" is the adverb in the sentence. It modifies the verb "rung" by indicating that the bell had rung before a specific point in time.
Who rung the door bell, I rung his neck, I stepped on the ladder rung, Rung Forrest! Rung!
The word "already" is an adverb modifying the verb rung.
The word "rung" is used to refer to a step on a ladder or a level of a hierarchy. For example, "She climbed up the ladder and reached the top rung" or "He has climbed up the corporate ladder and reached a high rung in the company."
He rung the doorbell.
the bell rung indicating that church has started.
"Already" is the adverb in the sentence. It modifies the verb "rung" by indicating that the bell had rung before a specific point in time.
Who rung the door bell, I rung his neck, I stepped on the ladder rung, Rung Forrest! Rung!
The word "already" is an adverb modifying the verb rung.
I had to finish my testfusillade before the bell rung.
The word "rung" is used to refer to a step on a ladder or a level of a hierarchy. For example, "She climbed up the ladder and reached the top rung" or "He has climbed up the corporate ladder and reached a high rung in the company."
The example provided is a complex sentence because it contains one dependent clause (after it stopped raining) and one independent clause (The bell rung four times).
The college bell was rung to summon students back to classes after a recess.
It depends on the tense being used. Rang is the simple past tense of "ring". Rung is the past participle of "ring".
In the sentence "By the time we got to school, the bell had already rung," the adverb is "already." It modifies the verb "had rung," indicating that the action of the bell ringing occurred prior to the time of arriving at school. The phrase "by the time" also functions adverbially, providing context regarding the timing of the events.
The homophone for "wrong" is "rung."