As long as you don't have any hardware or pins and screws holding it together and it wasn't broken at a joint you should be good.
"It is broken." Broken is an adjective. Broke is a verb, the past tense of to break.
it is(un)breakable
Imbroken
Not formally. The word broke is the past tense of 'to break' and broken is the past participle used as an adjective (a broken switch).Broke is used colloquially as an adjective to mean "bankrupt" and in the aphorism "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
Broke is a verb, the past tense of break and is used like this:The big boy broke his brothers toy. I broke my cell phone yesterday.Broken is also a verb, the past participle of break and is used like this:The boys have broken the window. Our team has broken the world record.Broken can also be an adjective:The toy is broken.
Depends how broken it is.
broken
infinitive: break past: broke past participle: broken
Broke. It's for a sentence like this: I broke the glass yesterday Broken. It's for a sentence like this: My bag was broken last night
I broke my leg. (active voice) My leg is broken. (passive voice) Active voice vs. Passive voice.
The preposition in the sentence is "except". It shows the relationship between the eggs breaking and the one that did not break.
august