Biting is a conjugated form of the verb to bite as seen in examples below:
Present continuous
I am biting
you are biting
he/she/itis biting
we are biting
you are biting
they are biting
Past continuous
I was biting
you were biting
he/she/itwas biting
we were biting
you were biting
they were biting
The likely word is spelled phlegm (loose saliva).
All of the episodes of "The Perils of Pauline" depicted her nail-biting adventures.
Idiosyncrasies of nervousness include the biting of nails, tapping of toes, biting one's lip or becoming quite fidgety
biting our nails
The abstract noun form of the verb "bite" is "biting." Abstract nouns refer to concepts, qualities, or states rather than physical objects or actions. In this case, "biting" represents the act or concept of biting, without specifying a specific instance or object involved.
The word biting is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb bite.
No. Biting can be a verb as well as an adjective.
Fish is not a preposition. It's a noun and a verb. Noun: The fish are biting today. Verb: Let's fish today.
in most cases it is a verb, in the act of "chewing".
I am biting. You are biting. She is biting. We are biting.
The likely word is spelled phlegm (loose saliva).
I can give you several sentences.The fleas were biting the dog hard enough to make it yelp.She made a biting remark and hurt his feelings.Are the fish biting today?
No Biting was created in 1993.
Biting Tongues ended in 1989.
No biting is "No morder," in spanish.
My baby brother is biting me.
Biting things of course Just kidding I dont think there is a biting Club!!!