No, it is not. Telling is the present participle of the verb (to tell) and may be used as a verb form, a participial, a noun, and occasionally an adjective (revelatory, or having a strong effect).
It's a noun. By the way, you can just Google "define lignite" and you'll get a result telling you its definition, part of speech, and a sample sentence with it. Of course, this works for just about every word in the English language.
hey
the smallest glacier is 20ft im not telling the truth
It means when you keep telling them to play a game or website
The present participle is telling.
Dream telling, because he rarely has dreams.
The present tense of told is tell or tells:I, you, we, they tell.He, she, it tells.(The present participle is telling: this can be am telling, is telling, or are telling.)
A telling part of a sentence usually includes the main idea or the crucial information that the sentence is trying to convey. It is the part that is most important for understanding the meaning of the sentence.
I'm telling my mum that you said a bad word!
I/you/we/they live. He/she/it lives. The present participle is living.
The term 'chickening out' is present participle of the verb 'to chicken out', to fail to do something due to fear or lack of conviction. 'Chickening out' is a slang term. Example sentence: I had my mind made up to buy those Manolo Blahniks but now I'm chickening out!
Non ti sto dicendo nulla! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I'm not telling you anything!"Specifically, the adverb non means "not." The personal pronoun ti means "(informal singular) you." The auxiliary sto means "(I) am busy." The word dicendo, as the present participle of the infinitive dire, means "saying, telling." The feminine noun nulla means "not anything, nothing."The pronunciation is "nohn tee stoh dee-TCHEHN-doh NOOL-lah."
telling you a camandment
a period
declarative
A telling sentence is a declarative sentence that makes a statement or provides information. It is used to express opinions, convey facts, or share details.