The gerund phrase in the sentence "this bill is for talking to my friend in Omaha" is "talking to my friend in Omaha." It functions as a noun and is used to indicate the purpose of the bill.
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "talking to my friend Omaha."
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "talking to my friend." It is functioning as the object of the preposition "for."
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "talking to my friend in Omaha," which functions as the object of the preposition "for."
Talking to my friend.
The gerund in the sentence is "driving carelessly," which is functioning as the subject of the sentence.
The gerund phrase in the sentence is "talking to my friend in Omaha," which functions as the object of the preposition "for."
Talking to my friend
Do you like swimming
A gerund functions as a noun, representing an action or activity. A gerund phrase includes the gerund plus any modifiers or complements, and can act as a subject, object, or complement in a sentence.
A gerund phrase is not considered a sentence. See below: waiting for the bus (a gerund phrase, not a complete sentence) While waiting for the bus, I like to listen to music. (complete sentence)
The gerund in the sentence is "driving carelessly," which is functioning as the subject of the sentence.
This would be the phrase "climbing trees." It is because this phrase works in the sentence to be the direct object.
In that sentence, "crying" functions as a noun.
for joggingThe gerund is jogging, in the prepositional phrase "for jogging." The gerund is a noun here.
There is no gerund phrase in that example.
The first part of the sentence, "winning the race", is a gerund phrase, and "winning" is the gerund. "Winning the race demanded speed and endurance" is an entire sentence, because it contains a subject (the gerund phrase) and a verb (demanded).
object of pre