a irdie a pretty little bird
A child's toy hung hung from the ceiling means a mobile.
Hung gar is a form of southern shoalin kung fu.
if a highwayman was caught he would be hung
He is hung.
she was acussed of being a witch
I hang up; he hangs up. I hung up; they hung up. I shall/will hang up; you will hang up.
There were rings around his neck, which proves he was hung.
it means she hung up the phone on you because she doesn't want to talk
If 'hung it up on the tree' is in the past tense, as in 'He hung it up on the tree!', it is correct. If it is in the present tense, then, no, it is incorrect. In the present tense, the correct way of saying it would be, 'hang' or 'hangs', not 'hung'.
A cable suspension bridge is a kind of bridge hung from cables.
The 3 Indian freedom fighters who were hung at the same time were Bhagat Singh, Raj Guru and Sukhdev
It probably means she is trying to play a game of hard to get or she is just shy
Its usually filled with candy, hung from something and then hit by blind-folded people with a stick until it breaks and the candy falls out.
Someone shoved a broken Coke bottle in his face during a street fight.
Not necessarily. If he feels fed up with accusations, that could be a reason he hung up. However, him cheating is not ruled out and time should bring the whole truth to light.
She might have her thingy, or she might be sad about something, ask her!
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.