English, asked by pawarsunil172012, 1 month ago

difference between gerund and participle. in an easy way plz​

Answers

Answered by bhagwanjoshi1956
1

Answer:

What is the difference between a gerund and a present participle?

Both a gerund and a present participle come from a verb, and both end in –ing. However, each has a different function. A gerund acts like a noun while a present participle acts like a verb or adjective.

Example: snowboarding

Snowboarding is fun!

Snowboarding can be a gerund or a present participle.

When snowboarding is a gerund, it acts like a noun. It can be a subject, an object, the object of a preposition, or a subject complement.

Snowboarding is a winter sport. [snowboarding = subject]

I love snowboarding. [snowboarding = object ]

I am excited by snowboarding. [snowboarding = object of a preposition]

One popular sport is snowboarding. [snowboarding = subject complement]

When snowboarding is a present participle, it is part of a continuous verb tense.

Right now, the athlete is snowboarding. [is snowboarding = present continuous]

He was snowboarding yesterday afternoon. [was snowboarding = past continuous]

Tomorrow, my friends and I are going to be snowboarding. [are going to be snowboarding = future continuous]

Unlike a gerund, a present participle can act like an adjective that modifies a noun or follows the be verb.

Example: exciting

An exciting time was had by all.

The word exciting is a present participle used as an adjective to modify a noun or to follow the verb to be.

The exciting ride made the people scream. [adjective + noun]

People enjoyed the exciting roller coaster. [adjective + noun]

The roller coaster is exciting. [be verb + adjective]

Now YOU try: Look at the sentences below. Decide whether the underlined –ing word is acting like a noun, part of a verb, or an adjective. (Answers below)

What an amazing movie! I want to watch it again!

Speaking English well takes a long time.

He cares about getting a good job.

Shh! I am trying to sleep.

My friends and I were sitting in a café and talking.

The directions were very confusing.

They have been studying for a long time and want to take a break.

She loves traveling.

Answers: 1) adjective, 2) gerund, 3) gerund, 4) verb, 5) verb & verb, 6) adjective, 7) verb, 8) gerund

How do you know if it's a participle or the gerund?

The easiest way to tell the difference between the gerund and the present participle is to look for the helping verb “be”. If you find a form of “be” followed by the -ing form, that’s the present participle. For example: They’ve have been working for four hours. If the -ing form begins the sentence, or follows a verb or preposition, that’s the gerund. For example: Playing soccer is a lot of fun!

Answered by aradhanahoney09
0

Answer:

A gerund is a verb which acts like a noun.

A gerund is a verb which acts like a noun.e.g.hiking is a verb but when we used as subject of a sentence ii act as a noun.

e.hiking is something I do in summer

A participle is an adjective made from a verb.

e.ghiking is a verb

but we used to describe as a noun its become an adjective

e.gthe hiking trail was steep

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