Drink can be a noun.
I want that drink!
My mother made fizzy, fruit drinks!
There is a drink in the glass....
If it refers to alcohol...
I am going to drink an alcoholic drink!
I am drunk! (also a noun) because I drank (verb) all of that alcoholic (adjective), drink (noun)!
If I drink (verb) alcohol, I will get drunk from the drink (noun)!
in the case "i vomit when i drink tequila" it is a verbin the case "eww, there is vomit on your shoe" it is a noun
No. It is either a noun or a verb form (to drink). The past participle of drink is used as an adjective with a special connotation (drunk).
Drink can be a noun. I want that drink! My mother made fizzy, fruit drinks! There is a drink in the glass.... If it refers to alcohol... I am going to drink an alcoholic drink! I am drunk! (also a noun) because I drank (verb) all of that alcoholic (adjective), drink (noun)! If I drink (verb) alcohol, I will get drunk from the drink (noun)!
DRINK (noun) : a liquid consumed orally - plural "drinks".
There is no "noun" of "squashed", it isn't as if nouns and verbs are interchangeable. There is a noun "squash" which can be a vegetable, a drink or a sport. And there is an infinitive verb "to squash" primarily meaning "to flatten". The past tense of "to squash" is "squashed"
No, it is not a preposition. Drink is a noun or a verb.
The word taste can be a concrete noun for the particular taste of a food or drink: it is being sensed. For taste as in a sense of fashion, it is an abstract noun, but can also be represented by the abstract noun tastefulness.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.
drink (noun) = Trinkaĵodrink (verb) = Trinki
The word 'drink' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing. The word 'drink' is also a verb: drink, drinks, drinking, drank, drunk.
The noun form of the adjective obedient is obedience.
The noun form of the adjective 'prosperous' is prosperousness.A related noun form is prosperity.