It can be a noun, meaning the physical act in sneezing. The verb form is to sneeze.
The word 'sneezes' is both a verb and a noun. The noun 'sneezes' is the plural form for the singular 'sneeze'. Example: The sneezes come in a series of three or four when I get near to flowers. The verb forms are: sneeze, sneezes, sneezing, sneezed. Example: His mom frets whenever her little darling sneezes.
Yes, the word 'sneezes' is both a noun (the plural form of the singular noun 'sneeze') and a verb (the third person, singular, present of the verb 'to sneeze').EXAMPLESNoun: Those sneezes are keeping me awake.Verb: She sneezes like a mouse.
The word 'sternutation' is a noun, a word for an instance of or the sound of a sneeze; a word for a thing.
'Atishoo' is the accepted sound of a sneeze.
to sneeze
The word 'sneezes' is both a verb and a noun. The noun 'sneezes' is the plural form for the singular 'sneeze'. Example: The sneezes come in a series of three or four when I get near to flowers. The verb forms are: sneeze, sneezes, sneezing, sneezed. Example: His mom frets whenever her little darling sneezes.
Yes, sneezes is the third person singular form of the verb sneeze. It is also the plural form of the noun sneeze.
verb éternuer noun éternuement
Yes, the word 'sneezes' is both a noun (the plural form of the singular noun 'sneeze') and a verb (the third person, singular, present of the verb 'to sneeze').EXAMPLESNoun: Those sneezes are keeping me awake.Verb: She sneezes like a mouse.
The word 'sternutation' is a noun, a word for an instance of or the sound of a sneeze; a word for a thing.
If you sneeze on a Tuesday, you will kiss a stranger. The whole rhyme goes: If you sneeze on Monday, you sneeze for danger; Sneeze on a Tuesday, kiss a stranger; Sneeze on a Wednesday, sneeze for a letter; Sneeze on a Thursday, something better; Sneeze on a Friday, sneeze for sorrow; Sneeze on a Saturday, see your sweetheart to-morrow.
Because when you sneeze the sound you make is "SNEEZE!" ^No, it really isn't. I've not heard one person say "SNEEZE" when they sneeze, ever in my life. I've heard people say "Achoo", "Atishoo" and other ones, but never "SNEEZE".
sleeve
sneeze seems to have developed from an anglosaxon word fneosung (a sneeze).How the f of fneosung becomes the s of sneeze is a rebus which has delighted palaeo-etymologists for decades.yes& fneosung or fneosan which originated from the imitation of the sound of a sneezeis thought to have sounded more like fneusanam earlier on & to have developed from it among other local variations such as fniesen fniezen fnysa hnjosa nysa noisan & niesenThe Word Sneeze might have come from North African Language called Berber or Tamazight. in Berber the verb Isneeze means to sneeze. it is pronounced the same. the noun of the verb is called : Tinzi, it is feminine.Just realized how much I appreciate the word sneeze. #iloveenglish
Some people only sneeze once. Like me but my sneeze is a scream. I sneeze from my throat so that is probably why I only sneeze once. When you sneeze it is normally because your nasal passages are filled with mucus and your body is trying to remove it. When you sneeze multiple times it is just a reaction. Have you noticed if someone tickles your nose or you look at the sun you sneeze? After one sneeze some people have that tickle feeling so they sneeze repeatedly.
Yes, monkeys can sneeze.
Certainly koalas can sneeze.