No, it is an adjective, or far less frequently an adverb or noun. The related verb is to freshen.
As in to make or become fresh - freshen
"Fresh" can be both a noun and an adjective. As a noun, it typically refers to food that has not been processed or preserved. As an adjective, it describes something new or recently made.
The complete verb is 'are searching'; are is the auxiliary verb and searching is the main verb.
Fresh...as in fresh produce, fresh fruits or if you are being fresh with someone!
a verb
As in to make or become fresh - freshen
The verb for fresh is freshen.Freshens, freshening and freshened are also verbs."I will freshen up"."She freshened the fruit".
No. It's an adjective.
Feels is the verb here.
The word 'refreshed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to refresh.The abstract noun forms of the verb to refresh are refresher, refreshment, and the gerund, refreshing.
No, "stale" is not a verb. It is an adjective that describes something old or no longer fresh.
It can be, when it means fresh fruits and vegetables. The verb produce has the noun form "production."
The word air is both a noun and a verb. Example uses: Noun: Let's take a walk and get some fresh air. Verb: We've scheduled a meeting for the employees to air their grievances.
I think it would be open the door.
Hiding is a verb; hide, hides, hiding, or hidden. Example sentence: My mom was hiding the fresh baked cookies but I found them with my nose.
The verb form related to the noun production is to produce, produces, producing, produced.The word produce is also a noun form; a word for fresh fruits and vegetables.
The term 'fresh foods' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'fresh foods' is made up of the noun'foods' described by the adjective 'fresh'.A noun phrase functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples of a noun phrase in a sentence:Fresh foods are the basis of our diet. (subjectof the sentence)The flavors that fresh foods provide improve any dish. (subject of the relative clause)We prefer fresh foods. (direct object of the verb 'prefer')This market is a good source for fresh foods. (object of the preposition 'for')