English, asked by MrAmazing9264, 1 year ago

Difference between bath bathe and bathing with example

Answers

Answered by barbie1123
1

In American English, bath is always a noun. When you take a bath, it means you wash yourself in a tub of water.

In British English, bath is also a verb—one baths .

For Brits, to bathe means to swim or to pour liquid on something.

And bathing can be the past continuous or present or future continuous...

hope it was helpful :-)

Answered by wajeed810
0

“Bath” is a Noun. It is a Common Noun.

“Bath” is a place in Scotland. That makes it a Proper Noun also.

 “Bath” also refers to the act of bathing i.e. taking a shower or immersing one’s body in water or exposing one’s body to water for maintaining cleanliness and self-hygiene or just for fun or to allay depression or to waste time.

                       “Bath” also refers to the place where one bathes or where people (in case of public baths) bathe.

“Bathe” is the Verb form of “bath”.

For example :

I took a bath and left. (Here it is a noun.)

  • I bathe twice a day. (Here it is a verb.)
  • I bathed last evening. (Here it is a verb.)
  • I enjoy a long bath. (Here it is a noun.)
  • Cats, usually, hate bathing. (Here it is a noun.)
  • The tourist was bathing in the river. (Here it is a verb.)
  • There is a public bath nearby where people bathe. (The first one is a noun and the second one is a verb.)

mark as brainliest hope it helps

Similar questions