- A gerund is formed by adding -ing to a verb and functions as a noun in sentences, serving as subjects or objects
- Gerunds are used in three main ways: as sentence subjects, after specific verbs like "enjoy," "finish," and "avoid," and always after prepositions
- Some verbs must be followed by gerunds (enjoy, avoid, finish) while others require infinitives (want, need, decide, plan)
- Certain verbs like "stop" change meaning depending on whether they're followed by a gerund or infinitive (stopped smoking vs. stopped to smoke)
Gerunds
Using verb + -ing as a noun — in business English
What is a gerund?
A gerund is a verb that acts like a noun. You form it by adding -ing to the base verb.
Three main uses
1. As the subject of a sentence
2. After certain verbs
Some verbs are always followed by a gerund:
3. After prepositions
After prepositions like in, about, for, of, before, after, without — always use a gerund, not an infinitive.
Gerund vs. Infinitive — quick guide
Some verbs can take either form, but with a difference in meaning. Others are fixed.
| Gerund (verb + -ing) | Infinitive (to + verb) |
|---|---|
| enjoy, avoid, finish, suggest | want, need, decide, plan, hope |
| after prepositions | after adjectives (easy to do) |
| as the subject of a sentence | to express purpose (in order to) |
I stopped smoking = I no longer smoke (gerund = the activity you stop)
I stopped to smoke = I paused in order to smoke (infinitive = purpose)
Quiz – Choose the correct form
1. Complete the sentence:
2. Complete the sentence:
3. Complete the sentence:
4. Complete the sentence:
Fill in the gap
Type the correct gerund form of the verb in brackets.
1. We avoid ______ mistakes in production. (make)
2. ______ the team is part of my job. (motivate)
3. She is good at ______ complex problems. (solve)
4. They recommend ______ the new software before the launch. (test)
5. The process involves ______ each part three times. (check)
Practice Quiz
Click here to take the interactive quiz