how to use inexplicable in three sentence's
This is a sentence. A prisoner has to serve the sentence the judge gives him.
If you said "use coincidence in a sentence" you already know how to use it in a sentence and are probably getting examples. if you said" how do you use coincidence in a sentence" you most-likely don't know the definition of it.
This sentence is about nothing.
you just used it in a sentence
There is 1 in woken
Woken does not mean anything in German, the English word woken, means aufgewacht in German
The form of passive verb phrases is - be + past participle.The past participle of wake is woken. So some examples of passive verbs phrases are:is woken, are woken, are being woken.We are wokenat 6:am every morning. - passive sentence.Jack wakes us at 6:00am every morning. - active sentence
Woken Furies has 436 pages.
Woken Furies was created on 2005-03-17.
Finally Woken was created on 2004-05-24.
Yes there really is a word such as woken up for example, "She has woken up!"
Yes, the past participle of "wake" is "woken."
Awoken most certainly is a word; it comes from the old English verb "awake" and it means woken up, or made awake. The correct usage is anywhere that it could be replaced by "woken up". 'awoken' is the passive voice form of 'awoke' (past tense of the verb 'awake'). for instance, you can say "I awoke to the sound of dogs barking" or "I was awoken by the sound of dogs barking". in modern US English, awoken is a bit archaic - normally we'd say 'awakened' instead.
Neither is correct. It would be 'Have you woken?' It's correct, though it sounds stilted. Most people would say 'Are you awake?'.
The past participle tense of "wake" is "woken." For example, "I have woken up early every day this week."
Yes, "woken" is a real word. It is the past participle of the verb "wake."