Yes, that is the correct spelling of "dedicating" which is the present participle of the verb "to dedicate."
The word is spelled "dedicating".
Rededication is often heard of in religions. It is the act of being dedicating yourself to the religion after backsliding away for a while.
The verb for dedicated is dedicate. As in "to dedicate to something or someone".
The noun forms of the verb to situate are situation and the gerund, situating. The noun forms of the verb to dedicate are dedicator, dedicatee, dedication, and the gerund, dedicating.
If you are trying to spell musician that is how you spell it.
The word is spelled "dedicating".
dedicating
The cast of Roosevelt Dedicating at St. Louis Exposition - 1904 includes: Theodore Roosevelt as himself
It means dedication or rededication
The Gettysburg Address
the butterfly
dedicating from how they came and the types it was bred from it is China
Abraham Lincoln is not dedicating a battlefield, rather the cemetery where the Union dead from the Battle of Gettysburg are buried. The wording of the speech can encompass all Union dead from all of the fields of battle.
President Taft Dedicating the Naval Training Station at Chicago Il- - 1911 was released on: USA: 2 December 1911
A dedication speech is a message given at an event or ceremony to honor someone or something, expressing gratitude or admiration. It usually includes words of appreciation, commitment, and recognition, highlighting the importance and value of the person or idea being dedicated.
The motto of Bear Valley Electric is 'dedicating our energy to you'.
He was dedicating the Gettysburg cemetery and his speech laid out his thinking about the need for unification of the states.