The past tense is 'drank'. 'They drank some juice. ' The past participle is 'drunk'.
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!
The past participle of the verb “drink” is “drunk.” As “drink” is an irregular verb, its past participle is not formed by adding “-ed” to the end of the word.
Drunk is the past participle, used in the perfect and pluperfect tenses of the verb. "I had drunk the wine before you arrived."
If you are drunk, you are intoxicated. If you are a drunken sot, you are habitually drunk. The first term implies an instance of intoxication, the second a constant tendency toward intoxication. Also, people are drunk, but their behavior is drunken (with the idiomatic exception of drunk driving).
Drink, drank, drunk.
intoxicated; drunk. given to drunkenness. pertaining to, caused by, or marked by intoxication: a drunken quarrel.
Answer: The past tense of drink milk is drank milk.
The past simple form of 'drink' is 'drank'.
“Drank” is past. “Drunk” is perfect, which is the tense you use with the word “have” or “haven't.” So the answer is, “I haven't drunk water for two days.”
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."
Tippled. This mainstay of the English lexicon has been in use for over four centuries, the noun "tipple" describing a harmless amount of alcohol -- that pleasant glass of chard you weren't planning on having with lunch.
Yes, it is correct to say that you drank tea if, in fact, you did drink tea.
Ate and eaten are two forms of the irregular verb eat. Ate is the past tense form and eaten is the past participle form.
b) The Cat drank milk - This is in the simple past tense.
“Drank” Is the Past Tense of “Drink”
I drank two glasses of wine. I drinked two glasses of wine.
simple past tense and past participle of sleep.
You drink, you pee. But urine is more than just that drink you had a few hours ago. The body produces pee as a way to get rid of waste and extra water that it doesn't need. Before leaving your body, urine travels through the urinary tract.
Other plain terms for being drunk which appear in Grose include cup shot, pogy, top heavy, flawd, groggy or grogified, corned and fuddled.