Escape is both a verb and a noun. Examples:
As a verb: The plan is to escape before the boring lecture.
As a noun: A daring prison escape was the headline for the day.
It can also be an adjective:
Houdini was a famous escape artist.
I have an escape clause in my contract.
verb
The word plan is both a noun (plan, plans) and a verb (plan, plans, planning, planned); for example:noun: 'That is a clever plan.'verb: 'I need to plan my escape.'The noun form for the verb to plan are planner and the gerund, planning.
Depends on how you use it. Verb: I'm going to escape. Adjective: Look at the escape door. Noun: There's the escape.
Escape can be either a noun or a verb depending on the context. For example, if one were going to "make an escape," make is the verb and escape is the noun. On the other hand, if a man escapes, or someone says, "he escaped," escape (or its proper tense) is the verb
The word plan is both a noun (plan, plans) and a verb (plan, plans, planning, planned); for example:noun: 'That is a clever plan.'verb: 'I need to plan my escape.'The noun form for the verb to plan are planner and the gerund, planning.
Escape can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, it means an act of breaking free; as a verb, it means to break free, especially from some sort of confinement.
Quack is both a noun and verb.
Angle is both a noun and a verb.
A noun
The word learn is a verb only.The word float is both a noun and a verb.The word crowd is both a noun and a verb.
brewed is an adjective. brew is a verb.
"Work" is the word that can be both a noun and a verb. as in "I have a lot of work to do" (noun) and "I work from home" (verb).