Yes, it is a form of the verb "to step." It is the present participle and may also be used as a noun.
(e.g. Stepping on a crack does not break your mother's back.)
Verb
accelerate
accelerate
Accelerate
No. And if stepping is used with a noun, it is not actually an adjective either, but a noun adjunct (e.g. stepping stone).
Example: "She was caught running with scissors."The preposition, with, is an objective preposition.Why?Because the verb running has an object, with scissors. The object of a verb is something the verb acts on, or points to. The preposition with is part of the object in the above example.Another example: "They took turns stepping in puddles on the way home."In this example, in is the objective preposition, because it links puddles with the verb stepping. Where did they step? They stepped in puddles.
strolling, strutting, roaming, wandering, hiking, stepping, pacing, marching, shuffle, swagger, trot, tread
strolling, strutting, roaming, wandering, hiking, stepping, pacing, marching, shuffle, swagger, trot, tread
Stepping into the Limelight is stepping into the bright lights that hit the stage.
It's sisters stepping up. Only if the sisters owned stepping up would it be possessive.
Stepping into Tomorrow was created in 1974.
Stepping Selection happened in 2000.