The noun forms of the verb to breathe are breather and the gerund, breathing.
A related noun form is breath.
There is no abstract noun forms for the verb to breathe. The noun forms of the verb to breathe are breather, breath, and the gerund, breathing; all concrete nouns for a physical thing or a physical action. The concrete noun 'breath' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example: Her personality is like a breath of fresh air.
No, it is not an adverb. Breath is a noun (the verb is breathe). There is an adjective, breathy, which has an adverb form (breathily).
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
That is the correct spelling for the plural of breath, "breaths."The verb form is breathe or breathes.The term for "multiple widths" is spelled breadths.
Breathe is a verb; as in, "I need to breathe, I'm suffocating." Breath, on the other hand is a noun.
"Height" is the noun form for "high," and "heighten" is the verb form.
The noun form for the verb to infuriate is infuriataion.
No, it is a verb form or adjective, from the verb dehydrate. The noun form is dehydration.
The verb form of the noun "assertion" is "assert." It means to state a fact or belief confidently and forcefully.
The noun form of the verb "determine" is "determination."
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
A technology (noun) There is no verb form.