Does this sentence have three verbs?
"Just forget the egg for a minute, all right?" Harry hissed as Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet?
Are the three verbs hissed, whizzing, and landing? Is whizzing a gerund? I am kind of confused here.
verbs gerunds
New contributor
add a comment |
"Just forget the egg for a minute, all right?" Harry hissed as Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet?
Are the three verbs hissed, whizzing, and landing? Is whizzing a gerund? I am kind of confused here.
verbs gerunds
New contributor
"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
add a comment |
"Just forget the egg for a minute, all right?" Harry hissed as Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet?
Are the three verbs hissed, whizzing, and landing? Is whizzing a gerund? I am kind of confused here.
verbs gerunds
New contributor
"Just forget the egg for a minute, all right?" Harry hissed as Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet?
Are the three verbs hissed, whizzing, and landing? Is whizzing a gerund? I am kind of confused here.
verbs gerunds
verbs gerunds
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 12 hours ago
austingae
1043
1043
New contributor
New contributor
"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
add a comment |
"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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"Hissed", "went", "whizzing", and "landing" are all verbs in the quoted sentence. They are inflected forms of the verbs hiss, go, whiz and land. The quote within the quote contains the verb "forget".
The words "whizzing" and "landing" in this context would typically not be categorized as "gerunds". The exact definition of the term "gerund" (and whether it is a clearly defined concept at all) is actually disputed, but in general, a gerund is thought of as a verb with the suffix -ing that "acts like a noun" (for example, by being the head of a phrase or clause that is used as a subject, or as the object of a preposition). In "Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet", the words "whizzing" and "landing" don't have any "noun-like" function. They would be classified as -ing-participles (which are variously called "present participles", "progressive participles", or "continuous participles"; or "gerund-participles" if the gerund/participle distinction is rejected).
add a comment |
I did a very quick google search:
Hissed
Whizzing
Landing
Although in this case they say it is a noun, landing can be a verb.
Example:
I was flying. Then I landed my plane on an airfield.
As you can see, landed is a verb in this case, as you are doing an action to do something to the plane. In the google search, it is a noun, because they are saying that they made a perfect landing, not that they landed the plane.
In your sentences, all three are verbs. They are an action.
I hope it makes sense!
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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"Hissed", "went", "whizzing", and "landing" are all verbs in the quoted sentence. They are inflected forms of the verbs hiss, go, whiz and land. The quote within the quote contains the verb "forget".
The words "whizzing" and "landing" in this context would typically not be categorized as "gerunds". The exact definition of the term "gerund" (and whether it is a clearly defined concept at all) is actually disputed, but in general, a gerund is thought of as a verb with the suffix -ing that "acts like a noun" (for example, by being the head of a phrase or clause that is used as a subject, or as the object of a preposition). In "Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet", the words "whizzing" and "landing" don't have any "noun-like" function. They would be classified as -ing-participles (which are variously called "present participles", "progressive participles", or "continuous participles"; or "gerund-participles" if the gerund/participle distinction is rejected).
add a comment |
"Hissed", "went", "whizzing", and "landing" are all verbs in the quoted sentence. They are inflected forms of the verbs hiss, go, whiz and land. The quote within the quote contains the verb "forget".
The words "whizzing" and "landing" in this context would typically not be categorized as "gerunds". The exact definition of the term "gerund" (and whether it is a clearly defined concept at all) is actually disputed, but in general, a gerund is thought of as a verb with the suffix -ing that "acts like a noun" (for example, by being the head of a phrase or clause that is used as a subject, or as the object of a preposition). In "Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet", the words "whizzing" and "landing" don't have any "noun-like" function. They would be classified as -ing-participles (which are variously called "present participles", "progressive participles", or "continuous participles"; or "gerund-participles" if the gerund/participle distinction is rejected).
add a comment |
"Hissed", "went", "whizzing", and "landing" are all verbs in the quoted sentence. They are inflected forms of the verbs hiss, go, whiz and land. The quote within the quote contains the verb "forget".
The words "whizzing" and "landing" in this context would typically not be categorized as "gerunds". The exact definition of the term "gerund" (and whether it is a clearly defined concept at all) is actually disputed, but in general, a gerund is thought of as a verb with the suffix -ing that "acts like a noun" (for example, by being the head of a phrase or clause that is used as a subject, or as the object of a preposition). In "Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet", the words "whizzing" and "landing" don't have any "noun-like" function. They would be classified as -ing-participles (which are variously called "present participles", "progressive participles", or "continuous participles"; or "gerund-participles" if the gerund/participle distinction is rejected).
"Hissed", "went", "whizzing", and "landing" are all verbs in the quoted sentence. They are inflected forms of the verbs hiss, go, whiz and land. The quote within the quote contains the verb "forget".
The words "whizzing" and "landing" in this context would typically not be categorized as "gerunds". The exact definition of the term "gerund" (and whether it is a clearly defined concept at all) is actually disputed, but in general, a gerund is thought of as a verb with the suffix -ing that "acts like a noun" (for example, by being the head of a phrase or clause that is used as a subject, or as the object of a preposition). In "Professor Flitwick went whizzing resignedly past them, landing on top of a large cabinet", the words "whizzing" and "landing" don't have any "noun-like" function. They would be classified as -ing-participles (which are variously called "present participles", "progressive participles", or "continuous participles"; or "gerund-participles" if the gerund/participle distinction is rejected).
edited 10 hours ago
answered 11 hours ago
sumelic
45.9k8108211
45.9k8108211
add a comment |
add a comment |
I did a very quick google search:
Hissed
Whizzing
Landing
Although in this case they say it is a noun, landing can be a verb.
Example:
I was flying. Then I landed my plane on an airfield.
As you can see, landed is a verb in this case, as you are doing an action to do something to the plane. In the google search, it is a noun, because they are saying that they made a perfect landing, not that they landed the plane.
In your sentences, all three are verbs. They are an action.
I hope it makes sense!
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
add a comment |
I did a very quick google search:
Hissed
Whizzing
Landing
Although in this case they say it is a noun, landing can be a verb.
Example:
I was flying. Then I landed my plane on an airfield.
As you can see, landed is a verb in this case, as you are doing an action to do something to the plane. In the google search, it is a noun, because they are saying that they made a perfect landing, not that they landed the plane.
In your sentences, all three are verbs. They are an action.
I hope it makes sense!
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
add a comment |
I did a very quick google search:
Hissed
Whizzing
Landing
Although in this case they say it is a noun, landing can be a verb.
Example:
I was flying. Then I landed my plane on an airfield.
As you can see, landed is a verb in this case, as you are doing an action to do something to the plane. In the google search, it is a noun, because they are saying that they made a perfect landing, not that they landed the plane.
In your sentences, all three are verbs. They are an action.
I hope it makes sense!
I did a very quick google search:
Hissed
Whizzing
Landing
Although in this case they say it is a noun, landing can be a verb.
Example:
I was flying. Then I landed my plane on an airfield.
As you can see, landed is a verb in this case, as you are doing an action to do something to the plane. In the google search, it is a noun, because they are saying that they made a perfect landing, not that they landed the plane.
In your sentences, all three are verbs. They are an action.
I hope it makes sense!
edited 11 hours ago
answered 12 hours ago
Sweet_Cherry
415114
415114
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
add a comment |
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
For the example for landing, is that what we call gerund?
– austingae
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
"Landing", in the OP's quote, is not a noun.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
@HotLicks I understand the confusion. I never confirmed that it was. I will edit my answer.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
You just said "landing" is not a verb???
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
Oop sorry I got confused about landing because of the google thing.
– Sweet_Cherry
11 hours ago
add a comment |
austingae is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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"Went" is a verb in the past tense. Why do you think that the sentence has three verbs? Is this part of an exercise that you are working on?
– sumelic
11 hours ago
Learning grammar inside my SAT book and trying to find examples in Harry Potter.
– austingae
11 hours ago
You could easily have 20 verbs in a (moderately contorted) sentence.
– Hot Licks
11 hours ago