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DGP For the week of February 22, 2010 This week’s sentence: • speeding around the ice hockey rink is my sister annies favorite thing to do on boring days. Day One • • • • • • • speeding (gerund) around (prep. phrase) the (article) ice hockey (adjective) rink (common noun) is (linking verb) my (possessive pronoun) • sister (common noun) • annies (proper/possessive noun) • favorite (adjective) • thing (common noun) • to do (infinitive) • on (preposition) • boring (participle) • days (common noun) Notes on Gerunds: • A gerund is a verbal that ends in ing and functions as a noun. • Gerund as subject: • Traveling might satisfy your desire for new experiences. • Gerund as direct object: • They do not appreciate my singing. • Gerund as subject complement (predicate nom. or pred. adj): • My cat's favorite activity is sleeping. • Gerund as object of preposition: • The police arrested him for speeding. • A Gerund Phrase : • Finding a needle in a haystack would be easier than what we're trying to do. • You might get in trouble for faking an illness to avoid work. • Being the boss made Jeff feel uneasy. Your Turn: Identify the gerund phrase in each senence • Eating ice cream on a windy day can be a messy experience if you have long, untamed hair. • A more disastrous activity for long-haired people is blowing giant bubble gum bubbles with the car windows down. • Wild food adventures require getting your hair cut to a short, safe length. Be careful not to mistake a gerund phrase for a present participle phrase. • Gerund and present participle phrases are easy to confuse because they both begin with an ing word. The difference is that a gerund phrase will always function as a noun while a present participle phrase describes another word in the sentence. Check out these examples: • Jamming too much clothing into a washing machine will result in disaster. • Bernard hates buttering toast with a fork. (DO) • Buttering toast with a fork, Bernard vowed that he would finally wash the week's worth of dirty dishes piled in the sink. (Adjective phrase telling more about Bernard) • Points to remember: • A gerund is a verbal ending in -ing that is used as a noun. • A gerund phrase consists of a gerund plus modifier(s), object(s), and/or complement(s). • Gerunds and gerund phrases virtually never require punctuation.