'-
ING' FORM
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE
The present participle
of most verbs has the form base+ing and is used in the following
ways:
a.
as part of the continuous form of a verb
(See continuous
tenses in VERB TENSES)
Example:
I am working,
he was singing,
they have been walking.
b. after verbs
of movement/position in the pattern: verb + present participle
Example:
- She went
shopping
- He lay
looking
up at the clouds
- She came
running
towards me
This construction
is particularly useful with the verb 'to go', as in these common
expressions :
|
to go
shopping
to go ski-ing
to go fishing
to go surfing
|
to
go walking
to go swimming
to go running
to go dancing
|
c.
after verbs of perception in the pattern:
verb + object + present participle
Example:
I heard someone
singing.
He saw his friend walking
along the road.
I can smell something burning!
NOTE:
There is a difference in meaning when such a sentence contains a zero-infinitive
rather than a participle. The infinitive refers to a complete
action, but the participle refers to an incomplete action, or
part of an action.
Compare:
- I heard
Joanna singing
(= she had started before I heard her, and
probably went on afterwards)
- I heard
Joanna sing (= I heard her
complete performance)
d.
as an adjective
Examples:
amazing,
worrying, exciting, boring.
- It was
an amazing
film.
- It's
a bit worrying
when the police stop you
- Dark billowing
clouds often precede a storm.
- Racing
cars can go as fast as 400kph.
- He was
trapped inside the burning
house.
- Many
of his paintings depict the setting
sun.
e.
with the verbs spend and waste, in the pattern:
verb + time/money expression + present participle
Example:
- My boss spends
two hours a day travelling
to work.
- Don't
waste time playing
computer games!
- They've
spent the whole day shopping.
f.
with the verbs catch and find, in the pattern:
verb
+ object + present participle:
With catch,
the participle always refers to an action which causes annoyance
or anger:
- If I catch
you stealing
my apples again, there'll be trouble!
- Don't
let him catch you reading
his letters.
This is not
the case with find, which is unemotional:
- We found
some money lying
on the ground.
- They
found their mother sitting
in the garden.
g.
to replace a sentence or part of a sentence:
When two actions
occur at the same time, and are done by the same person or thing, we
can use a present participle to describe one of them:
- They went
out into the snow. They laughed as they went.
They
went laughing
out into the snow.
- He whistled
to himself. He walked down the road.
Whistling
to himself, he walked down the road.
When one action
follows very quickly after another done by the same person or thing,
we can express the first action with a present participle:
- He put on
his coat and left the house.
Putting
on his coat, he left the house.
- She dropped
the gun and put her hands in the air.
Dropping the gun, she put her hands in the
air.
The present participle
can be used instead of a phrase starting as, since, because,
and it explains the cause or reason for an action:
- Feeling
hungry, he went into the kitchen and opened the fridge.
(= because he felt hungry...)
- Being
poor, he didn't spend much on clothes.
- Knowing
that his mother was coming, he cleaned the flat.