If you use it as one.
He drinks verb Food and drinks noun
drinks
It can be a verb or a noun.Verb: He drinks juice.Noun: The drinks are on the table. (drinks = beverages)
It can be a verb or a noun.Verb: He drinks juice.Noun: The drinks are on the table. (drinks = beverages)
drinks
The word 'drink' is both a verb (drink, drinks, drinking, drank, drunk) and a noun (drink, drinks). Examples:Verb- I can't wait to drink my coffee.Noun- That was a great drink.
Drinking = trinken (verb) Drinking = trinkend (gerund)
subject + 'used to' + base form verb + object
Familia quae coniunctim bibit coniunctim manet is the Latin equivalent of 'A family that drinks together stays together'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'familia' means 'family'. The relative pronoun 'quae' means 'that'. The adverb 'coniunctim' means 'together'. The verb 'bibit' means '[he/she/it] does drink, drinks, is drinking'. The verb 'manet' means '[he/she/it] does stay, is staying, stays'.
The word slick is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. Examples:Noun: Be careful, there's a slick on the road from the sleet.Verb: Just slick down your hair and smile.Adjective: That's a pretty slick line but I buy my own drinks, thanks.
Verb: trinken Noun: (das) Getränk (der) Drink (alcoholic drinks only) (der) Trank (archaic) (der) Trunk (archaic)
Yes, the noun 'ice' is also a verb, for example, You can ice the drinks while I ice the cake.