ADJECTIVE: "Tropical birds can't survive freezingtemperatures."
NOUN: "I might go out tomorrow, but not if it goes below freezing again."
VERB, to freeze: "The experiment involves freezing the carbon dioxide gas until it goes solid and turns into dry ice."
The word 'freeze' is a noun, a word for a period of freezing weather, or a fix or a hold on prices, wages, etc. The noun form for the verb 'to freeze' is the gerund 'freezing' and 'freezer', a freezing unit.
No, the word 'frozen' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to freeze'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective; a frozen pond or frozen yogurt.The word 'freeze' is also a noun, a common noun; a word for a state of weather marked by low temperature; a restriction that forbids a quantity from rising above a given or current level.The noun forms for the verb to freeze are freezer and the gerund, freezing, which are common nouns.
Cold is a noun and an adjective. Noun: I have a cold. Adjective: Expect cold weather.
Yes, the word 'winter' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. Examples:Noun: It will soon be winter.Verb: We will winter on the Rivera.Adjective: The winter sports are my favorite.
Maravippu (noun) means the frozen unresponsive state (of body, of mind, of anything).Maram (noun) = tree, timber.maravikkuka (verb) = to freeze, to become as unresponsive as timber (tree dead).
No, "freeze" is not a proper noun. It is a common noun or verb that refers to the process of becoming solid due to low temperatures or the act of stopping movement. Proper nouns, on the other hand, are specific names of people, places, or organizations, such as "New York" or "Alice."
Freeze is a verb, not an adjective, and therefore is not easy to make into an adverb. The adjective form of freeze is frozen. However, "frozenly" is not a word. The closest thing to an adverb for freeze is frostily, which shares the same root fros-/froz-.
Yes, the word 'freezing' is a noun, a verbal noun called a gerund, the present participle of a verb that functions as a noun. Example: Freezing is the best way to preserve food bought in discount quantities.
No- it is a verb. "Will the pipes freeze?" It can be used as a noun "I remember back in the big freeze of 1995, it got SO cold..." An adjective modifies a noun. FREEZING could be used as an adjective "The freezing weather caused electricity use to skyrocket."
The word 'freeze' is a noun, a word for a period of freezing weather, or a fix or a hold on prices, wages, etc. The noun form for the verb 'to freeze' is the gerund 'freezing' and 'freezer', a freezing unit.
No, the word 'frozen' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to freeze'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective; a frozen pond or frozen yogurt.The word 'freeze' is also a noun, a common noun; a word for a state of weather marked by low temperature; a restriction that forbids a quantity from rising above a given or current level.The noun forms for the verb to freeze are freezer and the gerund, freezing, which are common nouns.
Cold is a noun and an adjective. Noun: I have a cold. Adjective: Expect cold weather.
Yes, the word 'winter' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. Examples:Noun: It will soon be winter.Verb: We will winter on the Rivera.Adjective: The winter sports are my favorite.
Maravippu (noun) means the frozen unresponsive state (of body, of mind, of anything).Maram (noun) = tree, timber.maravikkuka (verb) = to freeze, to become as unresponsive as timber (tree dead).
Yes it can freeze.
the word freeze is already in present tense. i am going to freeze this, it could also be freezing i am freezing Also Verb: to freeze, is freezing Adj: is frozen
Baby freeze, Turtle freeze, Shoulder freeze, Tutting and freeze