The word singing is the gerund; the phrase is 'with beautiful singing'.
Using a gerund at the beginning of a sentence is perfectly acceptable.
A gerund functions as a noun in a sentence, as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition.
A gerund begins with a verb and a -ing after the verb.A gerund phrase is a phrase that includes the gerund and the rest of the sentence.
The word within the word gerund is under.
The gerund is "Driving" and the gerund phrase is "Driving carelessly".
This is a statement and not a question. it is on A+
"Singing" is the gerund because it is being used as a noun. The sentence is not talking about a certain person who is singing in the ran, but the act of singing in the rain. Furthermore, the verb in the sentence is "can", and the subject always comes before the verb, so "singing" is the subject. Verbs, when they are used as subjects, are gerunds.
children singing
Singing in the rain.
the meaning of life her beautiful singing chemical engineering oil painting
There are two nouns in the sentence:drawing (a gerund)show
Using a gerund at the beginning of a sentence is perfectly acceptable.
A gerund phrase is not considered a sentence. See below: waiting for the bus (a gerund phrase, not a complete sentence) While waiting for the bus, I like to listen to music. (complete sentence)
A gerund functions as a noun in a sentence, as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition.
A gerund begins with a verb and a -ing after the verb.A gerund phrase is a phrase that includes the gerund and the rest of the sentence.
The word within the word gerund is under.
No, it is the present participle of "to sing" and may be a verb, noun (gerund), or adjective (e.g. singing carolers).