The verb for breath is breathe.
Other verbs are breathes, breathing and breathed.
Some examples are:
"I breathe in the fresh air".
"She breathes a sigh of relief".
"I can hear breathing coming from my wardrobe".
"Ew! He breathed on my cake!"
There is no abstract noun forms for the verb to breathe. The noun forms of the verb to breathe are breather, breath, and the gerund, breathing; all concrete nouns for a physical thing or a physical action. The concrete noun 'breath' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example: Her personality is like a breath of fresh air.
the answer is breathe.
The noun forms of the verb to breathe are breather and the gerund, breathing.A related noun form is breath.
Breathe is a verb; as in, "I need to breathe, I'm suffocating." Breath, on the other hand is a noun.
That is the correct spelling for the plural of breath, "breaths."The verb form is breathe or breathes.The term for "multiple widths" is spelled breadths.
No, it is an adjective. Breathe is a verb, breathing is a verb too... but then breathable is an adjective, which makes unbreathable an adjective.
Breathing can be either a verb or noun, It is the present participle of the verb "to breathe." Examples: VERB- She was breathing hard. ('she' is the subject, 'was breathing' is the verb) NOUN- The patient's breathing was uneven. ('breathing' is the subject, 'was' is the verb)
The plural of "breath" is "breaths." The verb is to breathe.
The word sought may be "breath" (noun) or breathe (verb).
Breathe is a verb; as in, "I need to breathe, I'm suffocating." Breath, on the other hand is a noun.
No, the word "exhale" is a verb. It means to breathe out air from the lungs.
No, it is not an adverb. Breath is a noun (the verb is breathe). There is an adjective, breathy, which has an adverb form (breathily).