[Grammar] he started noticing changes....

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Oceanlike

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In the sentences below, I'm unsure if the words "noticing" and "making" are gerunds. The respective verbs are "started" and "stopped" I think.

- He started noticing changes in his sister

- His body has stopped making insulin.

It's embarrassing that i'm somewhat slow in identifying gerunds :-( Although I've read up on gerunds, I'm still unclear as to when it's a gerund and when it's a "to + infinitive" :oops:

Thank you for teaching me....thank you for your patience.
 

Oceanlike

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'noticing' and 'making' are gerunds?
 

BobK

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...
It's embarrassing that i'm somewhat slow in identifying gerunds :-( Although I've read up on gerunds, I'm still unclear as to when it's a gerund and when it's a "to + infinitive" :oops:

Thank you for teaching me....thank you for your patience.

Don't be embarrassed ;-) - this is a feature often described in confusing terms. Some people use the term gerund as though it simply meant "verb form ending with -ing". Some people distinguish between a verbal noun ending -ing (a gerund) and a present participle. English doesn't distinguish formally between I like eating (gerund) and I am eating (present participle).

You can teach/learn English without caring about the difference, and some teachers don't bother with it for that reason. But many languages do distinguish between the two; so if your own language marks this distinction, it's something you'll be aware of (and you can mark it down as something that English simplifies).

b
 

emsr2d2

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MikeNewYork

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I don't think the distinction is that difficult. If it is a verb form ending in -ing, and it functions as a noun, it is a gerund. There is nothing mysterious about it.
 
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