A vivid verb is a verb which creates a distinctive mental picture for the reader. A vivid verb for swimming is splashing around.
yes, swimming is a verb. A verb is a doing word and hence, you can swim.
No, it is a verb
yes
A subject verb is created when the act of doing something becomes the subject of a sentence. For example, although swimming is a verb, in the statement, "Swimming is fun," the act of swimming is now the subject of the sentence.
"Swimming" is a verb ending in -ing that can be used as a noun, as in "I enjoy swimming."
swimming
The word 'swims' is both a noun (swim, swims) and a verb (swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum).Examples:The swims that I take every morning give me a lot of energy for the day. (noun)Jack swims every day in the pool at the health club. (verb)
Swimming can be an adjective, e.g. swimming trunks, or 'a swimming head'. However, it can also be a noun, e.g. 'the sport of swimming', or a verb, 'the boy was swimming'. The present participle of "to swim" it is more technically a gerund used as a noun adjunct. Colloquiallly, a "swimming head" (from a head that is swimming, or confused) is an adjective.
swimming (verb) : nager swimming (sport): la natation
Swim means nothing in Spanish. In Spanish, the verb "to swim" is "nadar."
Yes, swimming is a common noun; swimming is also a verbal noun (gerund), a verb, and an adjective.