No, it is a gerund.
Yes it is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb relax -- she is relaxing in her room.
Also it is a gerund. -- She likes relaxing.
Relax is a verb.
The main verb is relaxing.
No it is not. Relaxed can be both an adjective and a verb.Adjective: easy-going temperament.Verb: past tense of the verb "relax".
Relaxes is a verb; the third person singular of the verb to relax (relaxes, relaxing, relaxed).
it means relaxing (as in the verb form, not the adjective.)
Relax is a verb.
The main verb is relaxing.
is a verb
No it is not. Relaxed can be both an adjective and a verb.Adjective: easy-going temperament.Verb: past tense of the verb "relax".
Julie and Sam are relaxing in the hot tub. (relaxing = verb) Mitchell enjoyed a relaxing afternoon on his favorite Golf course. (relaxing = adjective)
Relaxes is a verb; the third person singular of the verb to relax (relaxes, relaxing, relaxed).
it means relaxing (as in the verb form, not the adjective.)
It can be (e.g. a relaxing massage). The present participle of the verb (to relax), it normally means "providing relaxation" -- for a person in the act of relaxing, you would use a participial phrase (e.g. a man relaxing in the tub).
relaxing: adjective, relax: verb and relaxation: noun. No idea for the adverb, though.
The noun forms for the verb to relax are relaxer, relaxation, and the gerund, relaxing.
Flow is a verb and a noun. Verb: Water flows from the faucet. Noun: The steady flow of water from the fountain is relaxing.
The word 'relaxes' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to relax.The noun forms of the verb to relax are relaxer, relaxation, and the gerund, relaxing.