The past simple form of “drink” is “drank.”
The past tense of drink is drank, not drinked. For regular verbs in English, we form the past tense by adding -ED. But drink is an irregular verb, so the correct past tense is drank. We never use “drinked” – it's not a word in English!
Correct Usage of 'Drank' and 'Drunk'
Modern handbooks only recognize drunk as the past participle, so you will want to use the past drank and the past participle drunk in writing. Use of drunk as the past tense is essentially dialectal and outside of dialect is considered incorrect.
Drank and drunk are forms of the irregular verb drink. Drank is the past tense form, as in I drank two glasses of water last night. Drunk is the past participle, as in She had drunk three cups of coffee before 9 a.m.
Example Sentences with "Drank" and "Drunk"
(Here, "drank" is the simple past tense.) I have drunk a coffee. (Here, "drunk" is a past participle.) I have drank a coffee.
Learn English: Drink, drank and drunk.
The word “drank” is the past simple tense form of the verb “drink,” which is supposed to indicate a completed action in the past. He drank a cup of tea yesterday.
Answer and Explanation: "Drunk" is the present perfect tense of the verb "drink." Here is an example of how to use this conjugation: I have drunk all the wine.
simple past tense and past participle of sleep.
Which is the correct past participle? Swim is an irregular verb; swam is the past tense of swim, while swum is the past participle. Swum is used after have, as in "I have swum in that pool before."
'I have drunk' is a correct grammatical construction using the present perfect form of the verb 'to drink'. 'I have drank' is not a correct construction.
In the past simple tense, fly becomes flew.
'Bought' is the past tense of 'buy'.
The past tense of 'drive' is 'drove'.
You walked. He/she walked. We walked. They walked.
No, "I was slept" is not grammatically correct. The correct form would be "I slept."
"Slept" is past tense, as in "I slept well last night". "I hope I will sleep as well tonight as I slept last night". Hope that helps a bit. Yes, "she's already asleep" is perfect.
synonyms: drunkard, inebriate, rummy, sot, wino. types: alcoholic, alky, boozer, dipsomaniac, lush, soaker, souse.
The past tense of think is "thought", please kindly remember it.
“Spoke” is the simple past tense of speak.
fought. / (fɔːt) / verb. the past tense and past participle of fight.
Simple Present Tense: I drink coffee . Present Progressive Tense: I am drinking coffee. Present Perfect: I have drunk coffee.