The -ing ending for English verbs is used in several different situations. -ing form is also seen in participles (verb forms which are used as adjectives) participles are adjectives which modify nouns: the movie was boring. That was an exciting game. His explanation was confusing.
The -ing ending for English verbs is used in several different situations. -ing form is also seen in participles (verb forms which are used as adjectives) participles are adjectives which modify nouns: the movie was boring. That was an exciting game. His explanation was confusing.
The -ing ending for English verbs is used in several different situations. -ing form is also seen in participles (verb forms which are used as adjectives) participles are adjectives which modify nouns: the movie was boring. That was an exciting game. His explanation was confusing.
English verbs have five basic forms: the base form, the - S form, the - ing form, the past form, and the past participle form. The - ing ending for English verbs is used in several different situations: 1. The -ing ending is used to show the progressive aspect (progressive / continuous verb tenses). The progressive aspect shows that an action is / was / has been / had been / will be (etc.) in progress at a particular time or during a particular period of time. It often suggests that the action is / was / has been / had been / will be (etc.) long or uninterrupted. All of the English tenses can use the progressive aspect-- and in both active and passive sentences. Progressive aspect always has at least two parts: the verb be (which is often contracted) and an - ing verb: He's studying. They were going home when I saw them. You've been working too hard! We'd been talking about you before you called. At 1:00 AM, I'll be sleeping. John might be working. I'm not sure The operation is being performed right now. The letters were being typed when I left.
2. The -ing form is also used for gerunds (verbs which are used as nouns). Gerunds can be used as nouns for subjects and subject complements: Learning a language isn't easy. Talking to Bill was a lot of fun. Communicating by e-mail has become very common. His hobby is collecting stamps. ______________________________________
Gerunds can also be used as nouns for objects of verbs and prepositions: They dislike studying. For exercise, he recommends swimming. He doesn't care about being on time. They're tired of listening to you. Did he succeed in solving the problem?
3. The -ing form is also seen in participles (verb forms which are used as adjectives). Participles are commonly used as adjectives which modify nouns: The movie was boring. That was an exciting game. His explanation was confusing. ______________________________________
Participles are also used in phrases which modify parts of sentences or entire sentences: Whistling happily, he began to work. He entered the room, whistling happily, and began to work. Holding his hands in the air, he surrendered. He surrendered reluctantly, knowing that he had no other choice.
4. The -ing form is also used after go in many expressions showing leisure-time activities--including go bowling, go dancing, go diving, go drinking, go fishing, go hiking, go horseback riding, go jogging, go skating, go swimming, go shopping, go skiing __________________________________________________
Special Notes: 1. After to, base forms are generally used, but when to is part of a phrasal verb and when to is used as a preposition, it is followed by an - ing form: I want to see you. / I look forward to seeing you. Are you able to do it by yourself? / Are you up to doing it by yourself? He used to smoke. / He's used to smoking.
2. If phrases with participles are at the beginning of a sentence, they should modify / describe the first noun or pronoun in the sentence: Whistling happily, he began to work. ("Whistling happily" modifies "he.") Holding his hands in the air, he surrendered. ("Holding his hands in the air" modifies "he.") ______________________________________
If a phrase with a participle is at the beginning of a sentence and doesn't modify / describe the first noun or pronoun, the meaning will not be clear. In this situation, rewrite the sentence. wrong--needs to be rewritten: *Whistling happily, the work was easy for him. wrong--needs to be rewritten: *Holding his hands in the air, the policeman knew that the criminal wanted to surrender.
3. Both present participles (- ing forms) and past participles can be used as adjectives, but they have different meanings: The movie bored me. ---> The movie was boring. / I was bored. That game excited me. ---> That was an exciting game / I was excited by that game. His explanation confused me. ---> His explanation was confusing. / I was confused by his explanation.
4. The combination go + an - ing form is not used for all leisure-time activities: wrong: *I go watching TV on weekends. *I go playing tennis on weekends. *I go sleeping late on weekends. *I go relaxing with my friends on weekends.
5. Some verbs which combine with other words are followed by an -ing form (gerund), not to and a base form: I regret saying that. He admitted stealing the money. I recommend seeing a doctor. He considered taking a vacation. They proposed taking a break. Did she suggest cheating?