No, it is a verb because it is action, not a description but I see how you would be confused.
The word 'rolling' is the present participle, present tense of the verb 'to roll'. The present participle is also a gerund, a verb form that functions as a noun, and an adjective. Examples:Verb: A crew was rolling the paving to a smooth surface.Noun: When the rolling was completed, the next crew painted the lines.Adjective: As Jim watched the men work he said he wanted to run a big rolling machine when he grew up.
The word "billowing" is most commonly used as a verb, functioning as the present participle of the verb "billow." It can also be used as an adjective to describe something that is flowing or moving in a large, rolling manner, such as "billowing clouds."
For rolling dough and pastry
The Rolling Stones.
Cinematech Nocturnal Emissions - 2005 Rolling Rolling Rolling--- 2-4 was released on: USA: 15 February 2006
The problem can be split into two parts, rolling a 12, or rolling a 4 or less. This can be further broken down to rolling a 2, rolling a 3, rolling a 4, or rolling a 12. P(rolling 4 or less, or 12) = P(rolling 4 or less) + P(rolling 12) = P(rolling a 2) + P(rolling a 3) + P(rolling a 4) + P(rolling a 12) = 1/36 + 2/36 + 3/36 + 1/36 = 7/36
Which is better, perpendicular or parallel bat rolling, will depend on the type of bat you are rolling. If you are rolling an aluminum bat parallel bat rolling is better.
rolling to sliding
Not all rolling pins are. The weight helps flatten what you are rolling.
The frictional force offered when rolling of an object is called rolling friction
Rolling rolling your pitcher going bowling x2
The answer depends on what "rolling a one" refers to.rolling a sum of one,rolling a difference of one,rolling a product of one,rolling a one on one die only,rolling a one on one or both dice.Unfortunately these probabilities are different and the question is ambiguous.