It can be... but only when not pertaining to humans.
Sally said," I flooded myself" could not be found in any type of slang and so only pertains to sources of water and others.
Ex. "The waterfall flooded the canyon because of the dam breaking," said the dam operator.
Flood can also be a noun in the proper tense and can also be a proper noun as it is references to biblical passages.
Ex. "The Flood had lasted for 7 days and 7 nights."
The verb "flooded" is a regular verb, as it follows the typical pattern of adding -ed to the base form of the verb to form the past tense.
Flood can be used as a verb already because it is an action. As in "to flood something".Floods, flooding and flooded are also verbs."I will flood the house"."He floods the street"."We are flooding them with leaflets"."We are flooded with pies".
Flooded is the past tense and past participle of the verb flood. The past participle can be used as an adjective.Examples:Verb: The storm flooded the entire city.Adjective: a flooded basement.
No, using the verb 'flood', the auxiliary verb 'has' calls for the past tense of the main verb: Your house has flooded. Using the word 'flood' as a noun, calls for an article preceding the noun: Your house has a flood. Your house has the flood.
Yes, the word 'border' is both a noun and a verb.Examples:The border of the tablecloth was embroidered with roses. (noun)Several farms that border the river were flooded. (verb)
It can be (flooding rains, flooding basements). Both the present participle (flooding) and the past partciple (flooded) are adjectives for the verb 'to flood.'
No, my basement has not flooded recently.
Flooded Belfry was created in 1800.
Cockermouth and the surrounding west Cumbia was badly flooded in November 2009 by the river derwent, it was also flooded in 2005 but not a bad
Meaning flooded with something.
The Nile river flooded the fields in Egypt.
The present participle of a verb (the -ing word) also functions as a noun (called a gerund) and an adjective. Examples:verb: We're dancing in the contest on Friday.noun: Dancing keeps me in good shape.adjective: We'll need new dancing shoes for the contest.The past participle of a verb also functions as an adjective. Examples:verb: The stream flooded the road in the storm.adjective: Don't attempt to drive the flooded road.