Drink can be a noun.
I want that drink!
My mother made fizzy, fruit drinks!
There is a drink in the glass....
If it refers to alcohol...
I am going to drink an alcoholic drink!
I am drunk! (also a noun) because I drank (verb) all of that alcoholic (adjective), drink (noun)!
If I drink (verb) alcohol, I will get drunk from the drink (noun)!
in the case "i vomit when i drink tequila" it is a verbin the case "eww, there is vomit on your shoe" it is a noun
No. It is either a noun or a verb form (to drink). The past participle of drink is used as an adjective with a special connotation (drunk).
Drink can be a noun. I want that drink! My mother made fizzy, fruit drinks! There is a drink in the glass.... If it refers to alcohol... I am going to drink an alcoholic drink! I am drunk! (also a noun) because I drank (verb) all of that alcoholic (adjective), drink (noun)! If I drink (verb) alcohol, I will get drunk from the drink (noun)!
DRINK (noun) : a liquid consumed orally - plural "drinks".
There is no "noun" of "squashed", it isn't as if nouns and verbs are interchangeable. There is a noun "squash" which can be a vegetable, a drink or a sport. And there is an infinitive verb "to squash" primarily meaning "to flatten". The past tense of "to squash" is "squashed"
No, it is not a preposition. Drink is a noun or a verb.
The word taste can be a concrete noun for the particular taste of a food or drink: it is being sensed. For taste as in a sense of fashion, it is an abstract noun, but can also be represented by the abstract noun tastefulness.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.
The word 'drink' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing. The word 'drink' is also a verb: drink, drinks, drinking, drank, drunk.
drink (noun) = Trinkaĵodrink (verb) = Trinki
The noun form of the adjective 'prosperous' is prosperousness.A related noun form is prosperity.
The noun form of the adjective obedient is obedience.