Anyone
New member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2025
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- Korean
- Home Country
- South Korea
- Current Location
- South Korea
"My sister enjoys baking cakes."
In this sentence, "baking cakes" is a gerund phrase. My friend, who is a native-English speaker, told me 'cakes' was an adjective because it modifies baking which is a gerund.
I have learned that gerund phrases have both verb and noun characteristics, so I understand that "baking" takes 'cakes' as an object, which is why cakes is a noun, not an adjective.
Is her analysis right or mine?
In this sentence, "baking cakes" is a gerund phrase. My friend, who is a native-English speaker, told me 'cakes' was an adjective because it modifies baking which is a gerund.
I have learned that gerund phrases have both verb and noun characteristics, so I understand that "baking" takes 'cakes' as an object, which is why cakes is a noun, not an adjective.
Is her analysis right or mine?
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