The word 'gardening' is a noun form, a gerund, the present participle of the verb to garden that functions as a noun.
The noun forms of the verb to garden are gardener and the gerund, gardening.
The word 'garden' is a noun as a word for a piece of ground used for growing flowers, fruit, or vegetables; a word for a thing.
No. Garden (and gardening) are nouns. There is no adverb form of gardening.
The word "gardening" can be used as an adjective, a noun, or a verb. Adjective: I need more gardening tools. Noun: Gardening is my favorite hobby. Verb: I was gardening yesterday. Questions like this can easily be answered by a dictionary. Dictionaries use a lot of abbreviations, so if you are having trouble understanding what your dictionary says, look in the first couple pages for a legend that defines the abbreviations (e.g. "v." means verb, "n." means noun, etc.)
The singular noun is garden.The plural noun is gardens.The noun forms of the verb to garden are gardener and the gerund, gardening.
is = verb gardening may look like it is a verb but it is doing the job of a noun - it is called a gerund.
Yes the word garden is a common noun. The plural would be gardens.
'Giardinaggio' is an Italian equivalent of 'gardening'. It's a masculine noun whose definite article is 'il' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'DJAHR-dee-NAHDJ-djyoh'.
Peter Henderson has written: 'Gardening for pleasure' -- subject(s): Gardening, Vegetable gardening, Fruit-culture 'Gardening for profit' -- subject(s): Vegetable gardening 'Gardening for profit ...'
yes it is. Note that the word garden can be either a noun or a verb. It is a place where you grow various plants, or it is the work that you do in that place. The present participle, gardening, is more commonly used than the past tense. I like gardening. You could say I gardened yesterday, but more likely you would say I was gardening yesterday.
Lynn M. Steiner has written: 'The complete guide to Northeast gardening' -- subject(s): Gardening 'The complete guide to upper Midwest gardening' -- subject(s): Gardening 'The complete guide to Western Plains gardening' -- subject(s): Gardening 'Landscaping with native plants of Michigan' -- subject(s): Landscape gardening, Native plant gardening, Native plants for cultivation 'The American prairie garden' -- subject(s): Prairie gardening, Grasses, Perennials, Low maintenance gardening 'The complete guide to lower Midwest gardening' -- subject(s): Gardening
The best time to start gardening is when you see the spring roll around then start gardening.
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You can get information on indoor gardening at Indoor-gardening-guide.com. You can also visit Gardenhobbies.com.