wounded wound is also the past tense of wind, as in "I wound up the rope."
The past tense is intervened.
The past tense is reminded.
The past tense is wared.If the question was meant to say wearthen the past tense is worn.
Wove is a past tense - the past of the verb "weave".
Present tense of wiped is wipe
"wound the clock" is past tense.
The past tense of "wind" as in to twist or turn something is "wound."
The past tense of "wind" is "wound," and the past participle is also "wound."
The past tense of "wind up" is "wound up." For example, "She wound up her business last year."
The past tense of "wind" is "wound," and the past tense of "sweep" is "swept."
The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had wound.Example: She had wound a ribbon in her hair.The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had winded.Example: He had winded himself by taking the stairs.
wound.
For wind meaning turn or twist, it is wound (rhymes with pound). For wind meaning tire or give air to, it is winded.
Oh, dude, the past tense for "wind" is "wound," like when you wind up a toy. And for "sweep," it's "swept," like when you finally clean up that pile of crumbs you've been ignoring for weeks. So yeah, "wound" and "swept," that's the deal.
That is the correct spelling of "wound" (an injury, or the past tense of to wind).
The word "wound" has two homonyms: "wound," which refers to an injury or damage to the body, and "wound," the past tense of the verb "wind," meaning to twist or coil something. The pronunciation differs slightly depending on the context, with "wound" (injury) pronounced as /wuːnd/ and "wound" (past of wind) pronounced as /waʊnd/.
The word you are looking for is cauterized.