No, it is the present participle of the verb "to wag"
It is a past tense verb
The possessive form is: The wet dog's tail is wagging.
It means that the plural noun before the apostrophe has possession of the noun or plural noun that follows it. Example: All the cats' tails were wagging.
Wagging is the present participle of the word "wag" - to move with short, quick motions.
Your dog' s tail is wagging because he is exited or likes something you did.
But no human being can tame the wagging tongue. It is restless evil, full of poison. James 3:8
When its wagging its tail
wagging
No, the word 'wagged' is the past tense of the verb to wag (wags, wagging, wagged).The word wag is both a noun and a verb.
It can, but this is more likely when the dog is sitting or lying down. When a dog is standing and wagging its tail, it's the momentum of the tail wagging that spreads to the rest of the dog's body and causes the rest of the dog to wag too.
Yes, that kind of pronoun is called a possessive adjective.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.Examples:My mother can pick us up.What time is your appointment?The dog was wagging its tail.Several students raised their hands.
Wagging
Wagging