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Sasha
Professional TeacherIt’s no use crying over spilt milk.
Hello, everyone!
I have a question on gerund. In the sentence below what is the syntactical function of the Gerund?
It’s no use crying over spilt milk.
My textbook says it can function as a Subject, is that right. If so, in "It’s a great treat listening to his travel stories is." it also functions as a Subject?
I can't unserstand why?
Thank you!
Sep 26, 2018 11:56 AM
Answers · 5
1
I've been out of school long enough that the more challenging aspects of English grammar are difficult for me to remember.
However, I will give this a shot. Let's say the same thing, but turn it around a little bit so you can more easily see what I am trying to explain. :-)
"It's a great treat, listening to his travel stories."
"Listening to his travel stories is a great treat."
Let's remove the prepositional phrase, 'to his travel stories' which will make the basic sentence more easy to see.
"Listening is a great treat."
Let's remove the adjective that describes the treat, as well.
"Listening is a treat."
Now that we are looking at it in its simplified form, we can see that the subject of the sentence is about a thing (noun) that is called 'listening'.
Does that make sense?
September 26, 2018
Hi Dimitry,
I misread your question. Valerie has responded well.
Thanks,
Stephen
September 26, 2018
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Sasha
Language Skills
English, French, Russian, Ukrainian
Learning Language
English, French, Russian, Ukrainian
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