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differences betwern boiled and boiling The water would be boiling hot The water would be boiled hot what're the differences between them ?
May 30, 2018 4:01 AM
Answers · 6
1
boiled is the past tense of "to boil" and boiling is the ACTION of bringing something to a boil (defined as bringing a liquid to a temperature at which it bubbles and turns to vapor). Example: I just boiled water to make pasta for dinner. The water is boiling and ready for the noodles to be cooked. I hope this helps!
May 30, 2018
1
"boiled" means finished action while "boiling" means action in process the correct variant "The water would be boiling hot"
May 30, 2018
1
"The water was boiling hot." (where 'boiling' is an adjective) = The water was really, really, really hot. "The water was boiled hot." (where 'boiled' is a verb.) -- Sounds strange because, by definition, boiled water is hot. "The water was boiled." sounds more natural.
May 30, 2018
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