Sung in a sentence as a noun

I'd pay those guys to whine at my wedding; a sweeter song has ne'er been sung.

The last paragraph certainly has greater weight when sung in chorus.

Everyone who has sung "Happy Birthday" is also a pirate.

I really loved what he was doing and sung the FeeFighters praises from the mountaintops whenever I could.

I've sung the praises of Shopify on multiple occasions, here and in real life and to various clients.

Anyone who has been online for any amount of time knows that the written word comes off a lot different than spoken/sung.

"up until recently he's been an unsung hero in history books"Tesla must be the most sung unsung hero in history.

He and many other faculty members in the department sung a very different tune to me and my classmates during the recruitment process, as did my undergraduate mentors.

> Have people changed so much in the last 70-80 years that these songs—which seem expressly designed to debase their singers and deify their subjects—would be joyfully sung in harmony without complaint at company meetings?[...

Our university sung far and wide about how it just raised $400 million for its endowment in its most recent fundraising campaign, and yet, it couldn't afford to pay me more than a $25,000 salary in the IT department.

Then by the present day you have a disturbing trend of one-chord or even no-chord music; apart from rap [which contains no singing but seems to have got simpler even in the backing tracks over the years] we now find that even sung songs are completely lacking in harmony or chord progression.

Sung definitions

noun

the imperial dynasty of China from 960 to 1279; noted for art and literature and philosophy

See also: Sung Song