Grammar Tips & Articles »

Verb Function 3 - Present-Participial Phrase (-ing Phrase)

This Grammar.com article is about Verb Function 3 - Present-Participial Phrase (-ing Phrase) — enjoy your reading!


1:29 min read
6,137 Views
  Ed Good  —  Grammar Tips
Font size:

Every verb has a present participle. Just add ‑ing as an ending. If a silent ‑e ends the word, then drop it: write, writing. If a consonant ends the word, you’ll sometimes have to double it: beginning, occurring (check the dictionary).

The present participle, which I call the ‑ing verb, shows up in verb conjugation. Add it to any form of the verb to be and you get the progressive tense (also called the progressive aspect):

We are studying ways to improve our writing styles. We should have been studying grammar in high school.

But the ‑ing verb also serves other vital roles. It can form the present-participial phrase, which can then act as a noun, an adjective, and sometimes an adverb. When the ‑ing verb acts as a noun, it gets a special name: gerund. Let’s take a look at examples of each:

Present-Participial Phrase Function
Running five miles a day improved the woman’s health. noun, subject of sentence
The woman running five miles a day improved her health. adjective, modifying woman
Running five miles a day, the woman improved her health. adjective modifying woman
The woman improved her health running five miles a day. adverb, modifying improved
The woman improved her health by running five miles a day. noun, object of the preposition by

 

Above you can see the amazing versatility of the verb form. We can take the same words—running five miles a day—and simply by manipulating the location of the ‑ing phrase and the structure of the sentence produce different sentences with different functions of the phrase.

Hard Copy

You may download our entire discussion of the Parts of Speech. Simply download the Grammar eBook Understanding the Parts of Speech.

 

Previous: Split Infinitives

Next: Fused Participle - Noun or Pronoun and -ing Phrase

Rate this article:

Have a discussion about this article with the community:

0 Comments

    Citation

    Use the citation below to add this article to your bibliography:

    Style:MLAChicagoAPA

    "Verb Function 3 - Present-Participial Phrase (-ing Phrase)." Grammar.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. <https://www.grammar.com/verb-function-3-present-participial-phrase-ing-phrase>.

    Free, no signup required:

    Add to Chrome

    Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

    Free, no signup required:

    Add to Firefox

    Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

    Free Writing Tool:

    Instant
    Grammar Checker

    Improve your grammar, vocabulary, style, and writing — all for FREE!


    Quiz

    Are you a grammar master?

    »
    Choose the sentence with the correct word order:
    A The train arrived at the station early.
    B In the park, children play happily.
    C Always he arrives on time for meetings.
    D She quickly solved the difficult puzzle.

    Improve your writing now:

    Download Grammar eBooks

    It’s now more important than ever to develop a powerful writing style. After all, most communication takes place in reports, emails, and instant messages.