ratcreature: RatCreature is thinking: hmm...? (hmm...?)
RatCreature ([personal profile] ratcreature) wrote2016-05-25 02:11 pm

help me find an English grammar rule?

In English with some verbs you can use their ing-form after go, i.e. sentences like "I go running often", "we are going shopping" etc., but with other verbs this is not allowed, i.e. you don't say "we are going eating"(*) but "we are going (out) to eat".

I think the rule is that the construction is only allowed with movement verbs, like go walking, swimming, dancing, etc. all work, but not with reading, knitting or painting. I'm actually unsure about playing, but I think not? OTOH working and hunting seem okay in the construction?

I tried finding the rule for this in grammar explanations but I'm not even sure whether the -ing is considered a gerund or a present participle here. So I was hoping that maybe the English language geeks on my f-list could point me.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2016-05-26 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, I am now really curious to find out what bearding is exactly, because I've never heard of it, but going off the general pattern of the other ones, I would expect it would involve not just growing a beard but participating in, I guess you'd say, beard subculture -- styling a beard, sharing beard pictures with other beard enthusiasts, keeping track of the growth of your beard, something like that. So now I'm curious if I'm right.

It seems like another thing all of the different uses of this grammatical construction have in common is that they imply doing the thing in a particular culture-specific way that is NOT implied by using the verb by itself -- like, if someone says they're "going dancing", you don't assume they are a member of the ballet and are performing tonight, or that they are going over to a friend's house and dancing to the radio. They probably mean going out to a nightclub or something like that. They're not just doing the activity, but participating in the culture of it. I'm not sure if that's true of every single use of it, but it seems to hold for all the ones I can think of off the top of my head.
Edited 2016-05-26 00:52 (UTC)
laurajv: Holmes & Watson's car is as cool as Batman's (Default)

bearding

[personal profile] laurajv 2016-05-26 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes! You are correct. With the addition of competition. See, for example:
http://thecanam.com

My friend is 2nd place in "Partial Beard". I also know the "Full Beard Natural – 6 inches or More" winner.