Participles & Gerunds: Verbs in Disguise
Ever wondered why some "-ing" words behave differently in sentences? That's because they're either participles or gerunds. A participle is a verb form used as an adjective, while a gerund is a verb form used as a noun. Both look like verbs but play totally different roles!
Gerunds always end in "-ing" and function as nouns in sentences. You can spot them as subjects ("Eating ice cream on a hot day is refreshing"), direct objects ("She enjoys reading novels"), indirect objects ("They gave me a hard time about leaving early"), or subject complements ("His favorite activity is hiking in the mountains").
Participles, on the other hand, describe other words in the sentence. Present participles end in "-ing" while past participles typically end in "-ed," "-en," "-d," "-t," "-n," or "-ne." Examples include: "Students planning to study nursing..." or "The car moved slowly on the road clogged with traffic."
💡 Quick trick: If you can replace the "-ing" word with "the act of (verb)," it's probably a gerund. If it's describing a noun, it's likely a participle!