Rung.
The past tense of "ring" is "rang" and the past participle is "rung."
Past tense: rang Present tense: ring Past participle: rung Simple past: rang Present participle: ringing
Rang is the past tense for the verb to ring.example: I rang the doorbell, but no one answered.Rung is the past participle for the verb to ring.example: John has rung the bell tower bells on campus before.note: participles require the use of the verb to have prior to the participle; "to have done something" - done is the past participle
rang is the past tense of ring and rung is the past participle of ring.
The verb 'ring' has the following tenses: Present: ring/rings Past: rang Past Participle: rung
The past tense of "ring" is "rang" and the past participle is "rung."
Past tense: rang Present tense: ring Past participle: rung Simple past: rang Present participle: ringing
rang
Rang
Rang is the past tense for the verb to ring.example: I rang the doorbell, but no one answered.Rung is the past participle for the verb to ring.example: John has rung the bell tower bells on campus before.note: participles require the use of the verb to have prior to the participle; "to have done something" - done is the past participle
rang is the past tense of ring and rung is the past participle of ring.
The simple past tense is 'rang' whilst the past participle is 'rung'.
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.
No: to ring, rang, rung. The Past Tense is RANG. RINGED is an adjective formed as a Participle = something with rings.
The verb 'ring' has the following tenses: Present: ring/rings Past: rang Past Participle: rung
The past tense of "to ring" is "rang," so you say "I rang the doorbell" or "I have rung the doorbell many times."
It depends on the tense being used. Rang is the simple past tense of "ring". Rung is the past participle of "ring".