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The full question is: What are surfing to catch and breaking Surfing is the ultimate rush To catch a breaking wave is to live A infinitive gerund participle B gerund infinitive participle C infinitive participle gerund D participle infinitive gerund gerund; infinitive; participle
Gerund. (as after most of the prepositions.)
The word 'getting' is the present participle of the verb 'to get'; the present participle of the verb is a gerund, a verbal noun, used in sentences like "You need to get while the getting is good". The word 'getting' never a pronoun.
Painting is a gerund, a verb acting as a noun.
Yes, the word 'enslaving' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb to enslave that functions as a noun. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.
The full question is: What are surfing to catch and breaking Surfing is the ultimate rush To catch a breaking wave is to live A infinitive gerund participle B gerund infinitive participle C infinitive participle gerund D participle infinitive gerund gerund; infinitive; participle
"To travel" is an infinitive.
"To travel" is an infinitive.
Infinitive, participle, and gerund.
The three forms of verbal are gerunds, participles, and infinitives. Gerunds function as nouns, participles function as adjectives, and infinitives typically function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs in a sentence.
adjective infinitive gerund noun clause participle adverb
visitando: it is in the present participle (gerund) The infinitive form is: visitar
Flaunting is a gerund or present participle. To flaunt is an infinitive.
prepositional phrase
"Dreaming" is a participle in this sentence, functioning as a present participle that describes the action of the children while they were sleeping.
A gerund verbal may only be used as a noun.
When an -ing verb is used as a noun, it's a gerund. "Jogging" is a gerund in that sentence.