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Pri 
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| In English, a gerund is a noun that carries the force of 
a verb, as does the noun cooking in the art of cooking.  
The tie applies to two verbs to produce a gerund.  
Gerunds are commonly used with Insert (/) and 
with Agenda (@.): 
 | 
   ]g=: +`*
+-+-+
|+|*|
+-+-+
   (g/1 2 3 4 5) ; (1+2*3+4*5)
+--+--+
|47|47|
+--+--+
More generally, tie produces gerunds as follows: u`v 
is au,av , where au and av 
are the (boxed noun) atomic representations 
(5!:1) of u 
and v .   
Moreover, m`n is m,n and m`v 
is m,av and u`n is au,n .   
See Bernecky and Hui [12].  
Gerunds may also be produced directly by boxing. Thus:
   ]h=: '+' ; '*'
+-+-+
|+|*|
+-+-+
   h/1 2 3 4 5
47
The atomic representation of a noun (used so as to 
distinguish a noun such as '+' from the verb +) 
is given by the following function:
   (ar=: [: < (,'0')"_ ; ]) '+'
+-----+
|+-+-+|
||0|+||
|+-+-+|
+-----+
   *`(ar '+')
+-+-----+
|*|+-+-+|
| ||0|+||
| |+-+-+|
+-+-----+
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