The verb for collision is collide.
Other verbs are collides, colliding and collided.
Some example sentences are:
"We collide into a heap on the floor".
"Still not used to ice skating, she collides with her best friend".
"We stopped the car colliding into the fence".
"They collided into us".
Collide
Collide is the verb form of collision.
Collision is a noun not a verb. The verb form is collide, and the past tense is collided.
Collider and collision are the noun forms for the verb to collide; collided is the past tense of the verb.
After the first collision.
After a collision with another player, Greg had a concussion.She quickly swerved to the left to avoid a collision.
Collide is the verb form of collision.
Collision is a noun.
Collision is a noun not a verb. The verb form is collide, and the past tense is collided.
Collide
Collider and collision are the noun forms for the verb to collide; collided is the past tense of the verb.
Collider and collision are the noun forms for the verb to collide; collided is the past tense of the verb.
That is the correct spelling of "collision" (an impact).
collide: Two football players collided on the field.
Yes, the noun 'accident' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
"Outright" is not a verb and therefore can not be used as a verb in a sentence! "Outright" is usually an adjective or adverb that indicates intensity or completeness, as in "Totally destroying a car in a collision is an outright failure of careful driving."
It can be, rarely (e.g. a crunching collision as the ship cut through the ice).Crunching is the present participle of the verb to crunch (making a grinding, crushing noise), and is ordinarily a verb form or a noun (gerund). The word crunchy is an adjective.
After the first collision.