[Grammar] being + P.P

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learning67

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Being bitten by the vicious dog was quite a misfortune for Tommy.

Is "being bitten" a gerund or participle and why ?

what is the structure for "being + p.p" ?

thanks in advance
 

Matthew Wai

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Something was quite a misfortune for Tommy.
Something is a noun or a gerund.
So 'being bitten' is a gerund in the passive.

Not a teacher.
 

Rover_KE

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Thanks in advance.

It is unnecessary to thank us in advance, and it's particularly annoying to have to correct it for you. Just click 'Thank' on any answer you find helpful.

Don't leave a space before a question mark.

* * *

Please note that a better title would have been
Being bitten by the vicious dog.

Extract from the Posting Guidelines:

'Thread titles should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.'
 

MikeNewYork

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"Being bitten" is the subject of the sentence, so it must be a gerund.
 

TheParser

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***** NOT A TEACHER *****


Hello, Learning:


In my opinion:

[His] being bitten by the vicious dog (complete subject) + was (linking verb) + quite a misfortune for Tommy (subjective complement).


James
 

Matthew Wai

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In my opinion, the complete subject can be called a passive gerund phrase.

Not a teacher.
 
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