It can be, when it means either "infectious" or "catchy" (infectiously popular).
The word catching is the present participle of the verb "to catch." It can be a verb form, an adjective, or a noun (gerund).
No. The word catch is a noun or verb. One adjective form is the past tense "caught."
its a verb...because its an action
catching is a verb, fish is a noun
What are driving catching and to find in If the driving age is raised again catching a ride to and from school will be impossible We'll have to find other transportation? A. infinitive, gerund, adverb B. adverb, infinitive, gerund C. gerund, verb, infinitive *D. adjective; gerund, infinitive adjective; gerund; infinitive
No, the word 'caught' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to catch (catches, catching, caught). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (the caught fish, the caught pitch).The noun forms for the verb to catch are catcher, catch, and the gerund, catching.
Lazy, aggressive, im not sure if drunk is an adjective but yeah.....
Bill Catching's birth name is Jerome P. Catching.
She is catching up with her homework.The horse was catching up with the rest of the herd.
Catching tiles
Catching the Butterfly was created in 1997.
Rat Catching was created in 1999.
yes there was catching fire
Eye Catching was created in 1993.