by DiJ92 Fri Nov 11, 2016 5:37 pm
Dear Ron
I have several questions
1. I understand that the core part of "dwindling food supplies" and "increasing sea surface temperatures" are food suppliers and temperatures, respectively; the "dwindling" and "increasing", as adjectives, describe food supplies and sea surface temperatures. However, in some cases, the core part of " Verbing noun" is verbing. For example, eating lots of food is bad; in this sentence, "eating lots of food" is a gerund and the core part of this gerund is "eating". Therefore, can I make a conclusion that when "Verbing noun" is a gerund, its focus is verbing and wheh "verbing noun" is a particle, its focus is the noun. Could you please evaluate my statements?
If not, how can we distinguish when "verbing" is describing noun (in others words, the focus is the noun) from when "verbing" is the focus?
2 there is a sentence: food supplies were dwindling, a result of an increase in sea surface temperatures.
in this sentence, a result is an appositive modifies to describe the whole sentence. In other words, that supplier were dwindling is a result of in increase. Am I right?