Lang tillægsform (-ing-form)
Regler for bøjning af engelske verber i forskellige tider
| Mønster | Regel | Eksempler |
|---|---|---|
| + ing | De fleste verber: tilføj -ing | |
| -e + ing | Verber, der ender på stumt -e: fjern e, tilføj -ing | |
| double + ing | Korte verber (CVC-mønster): fordobl sidste konsonant + -ing | |
| ie → ying | Verber, der ender på -ie: ændr til -ying |
FAQ
What is verb conjugation in English?
Verb conjugation is the process of changing a verb's form to indicate tense, person, or number. In English, verbs conjugate for third person singular present (adds -s/-es), past tense (adds -ed or changes form), and present participle (adds -ing).
What is the present participle?
The present participle is formed by adding -ing to the base form of a verb (e.g., walking, running, swimming). It is primarily used to form continuous tenses (be + verb-ing, e.g., "I am reading"), indicating an action in progress. Additionally, present participles can function as adjectives (e.g., "an interesting book") or in participial phrases.
What is the difference between a present participle and a gerund?
Present participles and gerunds look exactly the same (both are verb + -ing), but they serve different grammatical functions. A present participle acts as an adjective or forms continuous tenses (e.g., "The running water," "She is running"), while a gerund functions as a noun (e.g., "Running is good exercise"). The key distinction: if the -ing form serves as a noun in the sentence, it's a gerund; if it acts as an adjective or forms a tense with a be verb, it's a present participle.
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