The word "knocked" can serve as both a verb (e.g. "She knocked on the door") and a past participle (e.g. "The door was knocked down").
He left a mark on it he knocked so hard, it was this mark that told the dwarfs which door to go to.
Rhoda.
Who is knocking at the door
The day of door-to-door selling has largely ended. Too many communities have banned it. A door-to-door salesman was just what he sounded like: a man (it usually was a man) who walked down the street with a case of samples, knocked on every door and asked if the lady of the house would like to buy some of whatever he was selling. There are some direct sales forces out there. Kirby vacuums are sold this way, and so are Avon and Mary Kay cosmetics. But today, you have to call one of these people and ask them to come to your home.
He knocked on the door, then walked in without waiting for a response.I opened the door.
Although it's not seen at the beginning, later it's discovered that Lewis himself knocked on the door, and his mother just left without doing it.
yes you can.
he tapped in his old way on the door
It is not always an effective way, since it often annoys people. In the United States, door-to-door selling is illegal in places who have a Green River Ordinance. Children selling items for fundraisers should also not go door-to-door due to pedophiles.
It can actually be used as both.Noun - For example: "I heard a knock at my door"Verb - To knock. For example: "I knocked on the door"
knock can be a noun - he suffered a knock and can also be a verb - you knock on my door