Yes, the word 'bath' is both a noun and a verb.
The noun 'bath' is a word for the act or process of washing one's body in a large container of water; a container of water used to wash one's body; a container of liquid used to clean objects; a public facility for bathing; a resort with a mineral spring used for medical treatment; a word for a thing.
The verb 'bath' is seldom used in favor of the verb to bathe.
The noun forms of the verb to bathe are bather, bath, and the gerund, bathing.
Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.Yes, you can take a bath in bad weather.
Yes. If it were not soluble it would not work well as bath salt.
The term 'simple noun' is sometimes used to describe the nouns used to make a compound noun; for example the 'simple noun' bath and the 'simple noun' tub join to form the 'compound noun' bathtub. More examples:baseball (base + ball)hot dog (hot + dog)six-pack (six + pack)suitcase (suit + case)keyboard (key + board)Another use of the term 'simple noun' as an alternative for the term 'simple subject' of a sentence; for example:A big, slimy, green, worm crawled out of my apple.The entire noun phrase 'A big, slimy, green, worm' is the subject of the sentence, the simple subject is 'worm'.
Average UK bath tub size between 125 and 130 pints to fill a bath.
Bath is a noun.
Baths
Bathe is the verb, bath is the noun. "I am going to bathe." "I am going to take a bath."
No, "bubble bath" does not have a hyphen. It is a compound noun made up of two separate words that describe a type of bath. Hyphens are typically used to connect words that function together as a single adjective before a noun, but in this case, "bubble bath" stands alone as a noun phrase.
The noun forms of the verb to bathe are bather, bath, and the gerund, bathing.
The noun forms of the verb to bathe are bather and the gerund, bathing.A related noun form is bath.
Well this is the difference. A bath is in a bath tub and you sit and clean yourself. A shower is standing up in a tub or shower and you clean yourself.
Bath is a noun. The proper verb form is bathe, which is the present tense. Bathed is the past tense, and will bathe is the future tense.
Bath is a noun, bathe is a verb.e.g. I am going to take a bath.e.g. I am going to climb in the tub and bathe myself.
No. The plural for bath (noun) is baths. Bathe is verb meaning "to wash"; bathes is the present tense form of bathe.
The word "bath" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to the act of washing oneself or a container filled with water for this purpose. As a verb, it means to wash or soak in water. The context in which it is used determines its part of speech.
bathe (JHappy321 says) yes bathe because if you used it in a sentence bath would be "Oh your giving your dog a bath?" and bathe would be "Wanna bathe the dog?"