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  1. Jan 21, 2014 · Awake has two meanings: As an adjective it describes a person or animal's state. It may only be used as a predicate adjective, in the predicate of a clause, not as an attributive adjective before a noun: ok John is awake and at work. ∗ Awake John is at work. As a verb it is intransitive—it takes no object—and means “to become awake (adj

  2. Dec 17, 2019 · Awake and awaken are two distinct verbs that both mean "to rise from sleep." The verb forms for awake are irregular, but the most common choices are awake, awoke, and was awoken. The verb forms for awaken are regular: awakens, awakened, was awakened. For more info look here. Share. Improve this answer. answered Dec 16, 2019 at 22:50. user106183.

  3. Oct 20, 2016 · @Hellion: That's very interesting! My first thought was awakened sounds rather "dated" to me. But have a look at US/UK differences in this chart. It seems pretty clear that although BrE is adopting OP's versions faster than AmE, your version is still the dominant one on both sides of the pond. –

  4. Feb 27, 2021 · Feb 27, 2021 at 15:30. 9. Yes. Most native speakers would use too early for your context, because too soon is only usually used in contexts where it's "unsuitable" to do something because of some earlier event (that happened too recently, so you should wait for more time to elapse before starting the proposed activity).

  5. May 24, 2014 at 19:14. "Please be reminded" is just wrong and, lexically, makes no sense. You are already reminding them, so asking them to be reminded is pointless. They have no choice. It's like shaking someone who is asleep and then, after they're awake, saying "Please be awakened". – Kevin.

  6. The phrase "knock on the door" typically employs "knock" as a verb, referring to the action of using one's knuckles to hit a door to gain the attention of someone on the other side. In contrast, "a knock at the door" uses "knock" as a noun, referring to the sound that is heard when someone hits a door with their knuckles.

  7. May 3, 2016 · 2. Past perfect tenses usually carry an implication that something has happened before or after. I had talked to her yesterday. (before or after something else, context or previous conversation would normally fill this in) If you explicitly state "before" or "after" then simple past will do the job fine. Including the have can still be done for ...