§ 25. The gerund and the verbal noun.
The gerund should not be confused with the verbal noun, which has the same suffix -ing. The main points of difference between the gerund and the verbal noun are as follows:
1. Like all the verbals the gerund The verbal noun has only a nom-
has a double character — nom- ina! character.
inal and verbal.
2. The gerund is not used with The verbal noun may be used
an article.
with an article.
The making of a new humanity cannot be the privilege of a handiul of bureaucrats. (Fox)
I want you to give my hair a good brushing. (Hardy)
3. The gerund has no plural form.
The verbal noun may be used in the plural.
Our likings are regulated by our circumstances. (Ch. Bronte)
A verbal noun cannot take a direct object; it takes a prepositional object with the preposition of. Meanwhile Gwendolen was rallying her nerves to the reading of the paper. (Eliot)
5. The gerund may be modified
by an adverb.
Drinking, even temperately, was a sin. (Dreiser)
The verbal noun may be modified by an adjective.
He (Tom) took a good scolding about clodding Sid. (Twain)
THE INFINITIVE
§ 26. The infinitive developed from the verbal noun, which in course of time became verbalized, retaining at the same time some of its nominal properties. Thus in Modern English the infinitive, like the participle and the gerund, has a double nature, nominal and verbal.
185
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |