'To smooth' is generally mínigh.
To smooth your hair is slíoc;
to smooth the ground is réitigh;
to smooth a board is líomh.
To smooth is a verb, smooth is an adjective.
Yes. The word smooth can be an adjective or a verb.The verb to smooth generally means to make smooth or even.
The word 'smooth' is not a noun.The word 'smooth' is a verb (smooth, smooths, smoothing, smoothed), and an adjective (smooth, smoother, smoothest).The noun form of the verb to smooth is the gerund, smoothing.The noun form of the adjective smooth is smoothness.
linking verb It is the only verb in the sentence.
Perhaps 'assist', or 'smooth'...
Yes, the word smooth is a noun, a word for the smooth part. Example use: The smooth and the rough, this razor can handle any beard. The word smooth is also an adjective (smooth, smoother, smoothest), and a verb (smooth, smooths, smoothing, smoothed).
Only where it is used in place of the actual adverb form, which is smoothly.E.g. The car engine runs very smooth now.Otherwise it is a verb (to make smooth) or an adjective.
It can be an adjective, noun, or a verb. It is mostly an adjective, though.
When you are referring to the adjective, smooth, (a baby has smooth skin )use the following.mínIf you use it as a verb, as in to smooth something down or to even it outréidh
"Polish" can be a verb, meaning to clean or make something smooth and shiny by rubbing it. It can also be a noun, referring to a substance used for making things smooth and shiny by rubbing.
Both might be ok, informally, with different meaning. Unsmooth would be a verb, meaning to roughen, as a surface: I unsmoothed it with scratchy, rough sand-paper. Non-smooth would be an adjective: Stand on the non-smooth part for better traction. But it is better to use roughen for the verb and rough for the adjective.
The word curve can be used as either a verb or a noun. As a verb: when you throw a ball, its path will curve downward, because of gravity. As a noun: the equation can be drawn on the graph as a smooth curve.