BACK TO present-participle
present participle vs. gerund
[ prez-uhnt pahr-tuh-sip-uhl ]
noun
- a participle, in English having the suffix -ing, that expresses repetition or duration of an activity or event: used as an adjective, as in thegrowingweeds and thesettingsun, and also in forming progressive verb constructions, as in The weeds aregrowing and The sun wassetting.
[ jer-uhnd ]
noun
- (in certain languages, as Latin) a form regularly derived from a verb and functioning as a noun, having in Latin all case forms but the nominative, as Latin dicendī genitive, dicendō dative, ablative, etc., “saying.”
- the English -ing form of a verb when functioning as a noun, as writing in Writing is easy.
- a form similar to the Latin gerund in meaning or function.