sing\sang\___

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I sing a song I have sung before. I sing the song once more.

:wink:
 
Did he sing that well or what? ;-)
 
In my imagination I'm a good singer.

:wink:
 
sing/ sang / sung


I sing the song you sang two days ago , not the song you have sung this morning.
 
SING/SANG/SUNG BELONGS TO THE GROUP:

RING/RANG/RUNG

SWIM/SWAM/SWUM

ETC.

have a nice day!
 
I sing a song yesterday.I sung it very well. everybody is happy to hear that song i sung.


Hi Carhaeni

Your sentence should sound :

I sang a song yesterday. I sang it very well, everybody was happy to hear the song I sang.
The adverb "yesterday" requires past tense in this case.

Hope it helps
Best wishes

Teia
 
Actually, you can use "I sung a song yesterday". According to Leech & Svartvik, the past form allows both "sang" and "sung". However, it is rarely used. (British national corpus returned 96 hits for "he sang" and 2 for "he sung")
 
I sing a song yesterday.I sung it very well. everybody is happy to hear that song i sung.

You're using two times the Past Participle form of "sing" without a form of "have", wich is quite impossible. ;-)
 
SIng sAng sUng :cool: a song
 
Learn/Learned/Learnt

Would not have learned OR learnt OR both?
 
A singer is a person who sings songs.
The singer sang a song yesterday.
The singer has sung many songs since 2007
 
These type of irregulars that change in all three categories follow alphabetical order in the past tense and participle:

sing sang sung

sink sank sunk

ring rang rung
 
SING / SANG / SUNG
:-D
SALAM
 
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