Yes, it is correct as the past participle of the verbs 'awake' and 'awaken'. (Both those verbs are, however, much less common these days than 'wake' and 'waken'.)
"I have awoken at five o'clock every morning this week."
"They have awoken a sense of shame in their father by their criticism of his behaviour."
"We have awoken our mother but she is still in bed."
The past participle of "awake" is "awoken" or "awakened." For example, "She had awoken to the sound of birds chirping."
The correct usage is "uncommunicative," meaning not inclined to communicate or share information.
The correct usage is "during summer vacation".
The correct usage is "He is taking it very seriously." In this context, "seriously" is an adverb modifying the verb "taking."
The correct usage is "a unidimensional." This is because the word "unidimensional" starts with a consonant sound, so it requires the article "a" instead of "an."
"Two of them have sent" is correct usage.
The past participle of "awake" is "awoken" or "awakened." For example, "She had awoken to the sound of birds chirping."
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.
you can use the word awoken is a sentence like this: The lad had just awoken before breakfast.
The bear has awoken from hibernation.You have awoken the beast!
The correct usage is in Seventh Grade but to use this properly, you must out it in quotes. In "Seventh Grade" by Gary Soto,............
The correct usage is "uncommunicative," meaning not inclined to communicate or share information.
The correct usage in this case would be "If I were a volcano." "Were" is the correct subjunctive form when expressing a hypothetical or unreal situation.
Awoken Broken was created on 2012-02-27.
Depending on what "it" is, "took it off the car" can be correct English usage.
Yes it is correct.
The correct usage is:One ship sails on the water.Explanation:The reason why the correct usage is "on" is because the ship will sail on top of the water ie. on the water.