"Holding her breath" is incomplete. Holding can be used as a participle to create a progressive tense, or it can be used as a gerund (verbal noun).
As a present participle to create the present progressive tense: She is holding her breath.
As a gerund: Holding her breath made her pass out.
The present participle of bear is the same as its' gerund form which is "bearing." The present participle has the same form as the gerund but a gerund does not always meant that it is also a participle.
Wishing can be both a participle and a gerund. As a participle, it functions as an adjective modifying a noun, while as a gerund, it acts as a noun representing an action or state. In the sentence "I am wishing for good health," wishing is a gerund.
A gerund has the same spelling as the present participle of the same verb, but the gerund functions as a noun in a sentence and a participle does not.
"Planning" can function as both a participle and a gerund. As a participle, it acts as an adjective modifying a noun (e.g., "the planning committee"). As a gerund, it functions as a noun in a sentence (e.g., "Planning is important").
Training can be a gerund or a present participle.'Training for the marathon has kept me busy for months.' (Gerund)'He is training in the gym this evening.' (Participle)
The full question is: What are surfing to catch and breaking Surfing is the ultimate rush To catch a breaking wave is to live A infinitive gerund participle B gerund infinitive participle C infinitive participle gerund D participle infinitive gerund gerund; infinitive; participle
participle
APPROACHING is a Gerund or a Present Participle.
APPROACHING is a Gerund or a Present Participle.
"Reacted" is a verb in the past tense form. It is not a participle or a gerund.
The word "trained" can be both a participle and a gerund depending on its use in a sentence. As a participle, it functions as an adjective (e.g., "the trained dog"). As a gerund, it functions as a noun (e.g., "training is important").
Like other present participle forms of verbs, "talking" can be either a participle or a gerund.