To smell is "sentir" in French. Conjugations in link.
As a linking verb: That swamp smells foul. As an action verb: My old hound smells badly now; on our last hunt he missed a pheasant only three feet away from him.
No, but "attendre" is a verb meaning "to wait"
No, "appeler" is a regular -er verb in French. It conjugates according to regular -er verb patterns.
That is plomb!
Yes, smell is a noun and it is also a verb. Example uses:As a noun: The smell was so bad that we opened the windows.As a verb: I could smell the fresh cookies the moment I entered the house.
odeur as a noun, or sentir as a verb. the verb must be conjugated, and in the future, if you want to look up an translation, use wordreference. that website also has a french translator.
"puer" is the French verb for the English "to stink, to have a foul smell" "ça pue" is translated "it stinks"
will smell is a verb phrase.will is a modal verbsmell is a main verb
verb
The word "smell" can be either a linking verb (e.g., "The flower smells lovely") or an action verb (e.g., "I smell bread baking").
The verb is "have".
Smell can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it describes the action of detecting odors with the nose. As an adjective, it describes something having a scent or odor.
The word 'smell' is both a noun (smell, smells) and a verb (smell, smells, smelling, smelled).Examples:I like the smell of this air freshener. (noun)I smell fresh baked bread. (verb)The noun forms of the verb to smell are smeller and the gerund, smelling.
verb for smell (odour)
No. Smells is a verb form or a plural noun. An adjective would be smelly.
As a linking verb: That swamp smells foul. As an action verb: My old hound smells badly now; on our last hunt he missed a pheasant only three feet away from him.
Smelled is a verb. It's the past tense of smell.