Yes, the word requiring is a verb, the present participle of the verb to require (requires, requiring, required). The present participle of the verb is also a gerund, a verbal noun.
Examples:
Verb: This course has a prerequisite requiring a credit in psychology.
Noun: We don't believe in requiring after hours work.
Yes. Any word with the ending '-ing' is a verb.
A word formed by suffixing "-ing" to a verb can be either the present participle of the verb or a gerund, which is a verb form used as a noun.
It should have a Tobe verb before your main verb for adding ing... it makes the sentence progressive for example: i go to school... i am going to school...
Yes. Any word with the ending '-ing' is a verb.
Jump is a verb, jumping is a gerund. You can tell when a word is a gerund when it ends in -ing.
Of course. A gerund is a word ending in -ing. So running is a gerund AND a verb.
yes Delivering can be a verb or a gerund. A gerund is a verb that ends with -ing, but is used as a noun in the sentence.
yes Delivering can be a verb or a gerund. A gerund is a verb that ends with -ing, but is used as a noun in the sentence.
Adding the suffix "-ize" to a word typically turns it into a verb. For example, "realize" or "organize."
Yes. It is the present participle of the acting verb "to chew"
pizza does not have a ing verb it is an adverb
The suffix of "breathing" is "-ing," which indicates that the word is a present participle form of the verb "breathe."