an adverb
Hung out
The past tense of "hung up" is "hung up." For example, "I hung up the phone yesterday."
You could say (example sentence), "Josh and I hung out last week at my house."
She wrote her daily schedule on a slate hung by the door.
If the question is which word choice will make the sentence correct, the answer is that the sentence will not be correct unless the first word is changed from "does" to "did": Did the maid hang the laundry out to dry an hour ago? If, however, the question is what the correct past tense of the verb "to hang" [laundry] is, the answer is "hung": The maid hung the laundry out to dry an hour ago. The past tense of "hanged" is used only in reference to suspending a person by the neck.
Hung out
The past tense of "hung up" is "hung up." For example, "I hung up the phone yesterday."
We told the judge we were a hung jury.
The student's coat was hung in the closet. The students' coats were hung in the closet.
he was hung
He hung the towels on the clothesline.
He will be sent to the gallows for his crimes.He was hung from the gallows at noon yesterday.
Local politics woking boro council is a hung council.
The shopkeeper hung a closed sign on the door when he went home. Mary hung a picture of her idol on her wall.
the operator hung up on me
Gallow means to be hung
disgracefully I hung my head in shame