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verbal noun
[ vur-buhl noun ]
noun
- a noun derived from a verb, especially by a process applicable to most or all verbs. In English, a verbal noun uses the -ing form, as in , or the infinitive form, as in In Latin, examples of verbal nouns include 徱پō “act of speaking, utterance” (from ī “to say, tell, speak”) and cantus “singing, song” (from canere ”to sing“).
Eating is fun
To see is to believe.
verbal noun
noun
- a noun derived from a verb, such as smoking in the sentence smoking is bad for you See also gerund
Word History and Origins
Origin of verbal noun1
Example Sentences
Before a verbal noun or an infinitive: On the point or verge of; going; in act of.
Possessive case, 64, 67; rules for forming, 67; separate possession, in the, 67; with verbal nouns, 67 ff.; of phrase substituted for, 67; use of the apostrophe in the, 159.
In the examples above, the subject of the action is a single, unmodified term, immediately preceding the verbal noun, and the construction is as good as any that could be used.
The so-called imperfect subjunctive turns out to be a verbal noun with a preposition.
Generally speaking, the first two persons are formed from the verbal noun in b, which is by origin a future passive participle, and the third person is formed from the present participle.
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