English, asked by mahendrasankhe1968, 1 year ago

pick out the infinitive and the present participle :
1) He had been saving that exact amount to buy a gun for hunting summer

Answers

Answered by PS07
31

1.to buy

2.hunting.

Hope it helps.

Answered by varshika1664
0

Answer:

The Infinitive in the given sentence would be to buy, whereas the present participle in the sentence would be saving.

Explanation:

The 3 verbals— gerunds, infinitives, and participles—are formed from verbs, however are by no means used alone as action phrases in sentences. Instead, verbals feature as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. These verbals are vital in phrases.

The gerund ends in -ing and functions as a noun.

  • Jumping is fun.
  • He favored skiing.

The infinitive is the base form of a verb with to. Usually it functions as a noun, despite the fact that it may additionally feature as an adjective or adverb.

  • To jump is fun. (noun; subject of the verb is)
  • She had a proposal to offer. (adjective enhancing suggestion)

A participle is a verb that ends in -ing (present participle) or -ed, -d, -t, -en, -n (past participle). Participles might also additionally feature as adjectives, describing or enhancing nouns.

  • The dancing parrots entertained the crowd.

But participles have another feature. When used with supporting verbs such as to be and to have, they're action verbs and shape numerous verb tenses.

  • She is thinking about the children.
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