... as soon as he heard the alarm ring/rang/rung/has rung.

Sunshine_duo

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Good day!

Can you please help me with this grammar question? It’s a question from an exam paper.

Question: He rushed out of the supermarket as soon as he heard the alarm ____________.
A. Ring
B. Rang
C. Rung
D. Has rung

I was thinking: the alarm rang before, or least at the same time as “he” heard it. So the answer shall be B, which is the past tense.

A – present tense
C – past participle can’t be used alone
D - Present perfect, which is not applicable here
(“had rung” could be an option but it’s not in ABCD.)

But the correct answer says A – from what angle I shall understand it? Is it a special use with “as soon as”?

Thank you.
 
It has nothing to do with "as soon as". After "heard", the verb that refers to the sound that was heard is used in the bare infinitive.

I heard it ring.
He heard it ring.
We heard you speak.
They heard me shout.

It's true with other past forms of the verb "hear" too.

I have heard it ring.
We had heard you speak.
 
Do alarms ring in Singapore?

In American English alarms go off.
 
Fire alarms are commonly a very loud automated bell. Bells ring. It's perfectly natural for me.
 
It has nothing to do with "as soon as". After "heard", the verb that refers to the sound that was heard is used in the bare infinitive.

I heard it ring.
He heard it ring.
We heard you speak.
They heard me shout.

It's true with other past forms of the verb "hear" too.

I have heard it ring.
We had heard you speak.
@emsr2d2, thank you for the tip!

May I know, if the use is more or less limited to human's senses, for example "saw"/"smelled"? Or it's applicable to any verbs?
 
You used "shall" twice in that post. (Very authoritative.)

Simply answer the question "What did he hear the alarm do?" Only one of the given answers is possible.
 
May I know, if Is the use is more or less limited to human's human senses, for example "saw"/"smelled" no question mark here or it's is it applicable to any other verbs?
You need to practise writing basic questions. There's no need to be so formal as "May I know if ...?" It's old-fashioned and overly formal.

Why don't you see if you can come up with a sentence using a verb that has nothing to do with the senses but follows the same rule? (I'm not saying it's possible; I just want you to try.)
 
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