Freeze as in purposefully freezing something is an action and therefore a verb.
Freeze as in the act of being held in a fixed state is a noun.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
A noun is a word that is used to describe a person (man, lady, teacher, etc), place (home, city, beach, etc) or thing (car, banana, book, etc).
"Freezed" is not a grammatical word. The correct past tense of the verb freeze is froze. Frozen is the past participle.
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.
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."
It depends on exactly how it is used. It's the present participle of the verb freeze, and it can be used as a verb to create the progressive tenses, a gerund (verbal noun), and an adjective. Verb: I am freezing the water to make ice. Gerund: Freezing is a noun in this sentence. Adjective: We are expecting freezing temperatures.
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.
yes
Freeze frame is when you stop in a form of an action or verb
Frozen
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.
none, it's a verb
"Freezed" is not a grammatical word. The correct past tense of the verb freeze is froze. Frozen is the past participle.
Freeze frame is when you stop in a form of an action or verb
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
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.
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."
fall feed feel fight find fly forget freeze