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Jigneshbharati Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Remembering

It may be worth remembering that a gerund always functions as a noun


http://www.grammaring.com/the-difference-between-the-gerund-and-the-present-participle

Is "remembering" a gerund and "worth" an adjective?

What is the clue or rule here to suggest that the gerund form should be used?

Is "may be" the main verb?

Thanks

  

Top answer

It may be worth remembering that a gerund always functions as a noun . This is an extraposition construction where the subject is the dummy “it”, and the underlined clause is extraposed subject. Worth is an adjective here with the gerund-participial verb remembering as its complement.

  • It may be worth remembering that a gerund always functions as a noun .
  • This is an extraposition construction where the subject is the dummy “it”, and the underlined clause is extraposed subject.
  • Worth is an adjective here with the gerund-participial verb remembering as its complement.
  • The AdjP worth remembering is then predicative complement of be.
  • The matrix verb is may with be worth remembering as its complement.
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1 Answers
0

It may be worth remembering that a gerund always functions as a noun.

This is an extraposition construction where the subject is the dummy “it”, and the underlined clause is extraposed subject.

Worth is an adjective here with the gerund-participial verb remembering as its complement. The AdjP worth remembering is then predicative complement

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