Yes. Stink can be a verb or a noun.
Examples:
Verb: "I must really stink because I haven't taken a bath in two weeks."
Noun: "We had to call the police because a customer really stirred up a stink with all of their yelling and cursing."
Noun: "A decaying corpse has quite a stink to it."
The past tense is stunk.
The future tense of "stink" is "will stink."
Past tense - stank. Future tense - will stink. Present tense - stink.
The past participle of "stink" is "stunk."
The past tense for "stink" is "stank" or "stunk."
The past tense is stunk.
Yes, stink can be noun or verb.
Grammatically - no. Stink is a noun. Smells is a verb. You can only use an adverb to describe a verb, so I would suggest using stinky instead.
The word stinking can be a verb and an adjective. The verb form is the present participle of the verb "stink". The adjective form refers to having a pungent aroma.
"puer" is the French verb for the English "to stink, to have a foul smell" "ça pue" is translated "it stinks"
The future tense of "stink" is "will stink."
They do not stink.
no it will not. the stink bugs protection will always be there
stink bugs r not female because females don't stink male dofemale stink bugs NO male r stink bugs
spongebob does not stink
it doesnt stink
it does stink