After work I relax at home with my family.
On the weekend we relaxed by the pool.
relaxing: adjective, relax: verb and relaxation: noun. No idea for the adverb, though.
Yes, relax is a verb.
Neither: "Relax" is a verb.
Relax is a verb. It has no plural form.
It is "to calm".
Relax is a verb.
The noun forms for the verb to relax are relaxer, relaxation, and the gerund, relaxing.
Relaxes is a verb; the third person singular of the verb to relax (relaxes, relaxing, relaxed).
It can be (e.g. a relaxing massage). The present participle of the verb (to relax), it normally means "providing relaxation" -- for a person in the act of relaxing, you would use a participial phrase (e.g. a man relaxing in the tub).
The gerund phrase, "Taking a warm bath..." is the subject of the verb 'will relax'; the subject of the sentence.
Relax is a regular verb so you add -ed to make the past form = relaxed
No, it is a gerund. Yes it is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb relax -- she is relaxing in her room. Also it is a gerund. -- She likes relaxing.