Name:
1. Nunik
Maslakhah (163221043)
2. Linggar
Samukti Triwikrama (163221044)
3. Sartika
Sri Rahayu (163221046)
4. Tanti Nur
Khasanah (163221047)
5. Laila
Isrofa (163221053)
(PBI 1B)
PRESENT
PARTICIPLE
The present
participle of most verbs has the form base+ing. It is used in many different
ways.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE AS PART OF THE CONTINUOUS FORM OF A VERB
EXAMPLES
I am working.
He was singing.
They have been
walking.
We will be
staying.
She would have
been expecting me.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE AFTER VERBS OF MOVEMENT & POSITION
This
construction is particularly useful with the verb to go.
EXAMPLES
She went
shopping.
I go running
every morning.
He lay looking
up at the clouds.
She came running
towards me.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE AFTER VERBS OF PERCEPTION
The pattern for
this usage is verb + object + present participle. There is a difference in
meaning when such a sentence contains a zero infinitive rather than a
participle. The infinitive refers to a complete action while the present
participle refers to an ongoing action.
EXAMPLES
I heard someone
singing.
He saw his
friend walking along the road.
I can smell
something burning!
I watched the
birds flying away.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE AS AN ADJECTIVE
EXAMPLES
It was an
amazing film.
Dark billowing
clouds often precede a storm.
He was trapped
inside the burning house.
Many of his
paintings show the setting sun.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE WITH THE VERBS SPEND AND WASTE
The pattern with
these verbs is verb + time/money expression + present participle.
EXAMPLES
My boss spends
two hours a day travelling to work.
Don't waste time
playing computer games!
They've spent
the whole day shopping.
I wasted money
buying this game.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE WITH THE VERBS CATCH AND FIND
The pattern with
these verbs is verb + object + present participle. With catch, the participle
always refers to an action which causes annoyance or anger. This is not the
case with find, which is unemotional.
EXAMPLES
If I catch you
stealing my apples again, there'll be trouble!
Don't let him
catch you reading his letters.
I caught him
going through my bag.
We found some
money lying on the ground.
They found their
mother sitting in the garden.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE FOR TWO ACTIONS AT THE SAME TIME
When two actions
occur at the same time, and are done by the same person or thing, we can use a
present participle to describe one of them. When one action follows very
quickly after another done by the same person or thing, we can express the
first action with a present participle.
EXAMPLES
Whistling to
himself, he walked down the road. = He whistled to himself as he walked down
the road.
They went
laughing out into the snow. = They laughed as they went out into the snow.
Dropping the
gun, she put her hands in the air. = She dropped the gun and put her hands in
the air.
Putting on his
coat, he left the house. = He put on his coat and left the house.
THE PRESENT
PARTICIPLE TO EXPLAIN A REASON
The present
participle can be used instead of a phrase starting with as, since, or because.
In this usage the participial phrase explains the cause or reason for an
action.
EXAMPLES
Feeling hungry,
he went into the kitchen and opened the fridge.
Being poor, he
didn't spend much on clothes.
Knowing that his
mother was coming, he cleaned the flat.
He whispered,
thinking his brother was still asleep.
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