QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- what is the difference between a participle and a gerund?
- combine the two sentences using an appositive phrase.
meriwether lewis was born in 1774.
he was the son of a virginia planter.
- circle the correctly spelled words.
incidentally preferrable reccommend
succeed superceed unanimus
- when would you skim an article?
a. to evaluate the material presented
b. to preview material before a study session
c. to prepare to explain the information to someone else
Question 1
A participle is a verb form (present: -ing, past: -ed/-en) used as an adjective (e.g., "the running dog", "the broken cup"). A gerund is a verb form ending in -ing that functions as a noun (e.g., "Running is fun", "I like swimming"). The key difference is their function: participles modify nouns (adjective role), gerunds act as nouns (subject, object, etc.).
An appositive phrase renames or identifies a noun. We combine the two sentences by using the second sentence's information as an appositive for "Meriwether Lewis". The appositive phrase ("the son of a Virginia planter") is placed next to the noun it renames.
We check standard English spellings:
- "incidentally" (correct: means "by the way").
- "preferrable" is incorrect (correct: "preferable").
- "reccommend" is incorrect (correct: "recommend").
- "succeed" (correct: means "to achieve").
- "superceed" is incorrect (correct: "supersede").
- "unanimus" is incorrect (correct: "unanimous").
So the correctly spelled words are "incidentally" and "succeed".
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A participle (present: -ing, past: -ed/-en) functions as an adjective (modifies nouns), while a gerund (-ing verb form) functions as a noun (subject, object, etc.).