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Hi,
Many kind thanks in advance for anyone who can answer the following question. What part of speech is the word guitar in the sentence below: It's a noun, as you probably know.
I like playing guitar.
Is playing guitar a noun
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Hello,
Many kind thanks in advance for anyone who can answer the following question. What part of speech is the word guitar in the sentence below:
I like playing guitar.
Is playing guitar a noun phrase, and if so, what is that?
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Talking (Gerund) with youngsters (XXX phrase), including teenagers and university students (prepositional phrase) (YYY phrase), I (subject) found (verb) most (noun) were (verb) quite concerned (verb) about their future career (prepositional
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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avangi
1 yr 84 days ago
Prepositions, Nouns, Noun Phrases, Gerunds, Universities, Phrases, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Schools
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Hello, Eddie. Question 1 : The D.O. will usually be a noun phrase, although other categories can fulfill the same function (gerunds, noun clauses, pronouns). The I.O. can go before or after the D.O. If it if before the D.O. it will be a noun
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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miriam
1 yr 97 days ago
Prepositions, Tenses, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Noun Phrases, Past Perfect, Gerunds, Expressions, Past Tenses, Writing, Phrases, Speaking, Chat, Friendships
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If the genitive exists as a case in English, then it's the case assigned to a noun phrase by a possessive "-'s" that follows it. (I.e., in "the queen's museum", "the queen" would be genitive.) You begin
alt.usage.english
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eric walker
6 yr 113 days ago
Nouns, Marriage, Context, Relationships, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Chat, Adjectives, Languages, Gerunds, Noun Phrases, Genitives, Modals, Expressions
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