THE
INFINITIVE
1. Form
The infinitive is the base form of a verb. It
may be preceded by 'to' (the to-infinitive) or stand alone (the
base or zero infinitive).
2. Infinitive
with or without 'to'
The to-infinitive
is used:
a. after certain
verbs. e.g. want, wish, agree, fail, mean, decide, learn
b.
after the auxiliaries to be to, to have to, and ought
to
c.
in the pattern 'it is + adjective + to-infinitive'
Examples:
with 'to'
- The elephant
decided to
marry the mouse
- The mouse
agreed to marry
the elephant
- You will
have to ask
her
- You are
to leave
immediately
- He ought
to relax
- She has
to go
to Berlin next week
- It's
easy to speak
English
- It is
hard to change
jobs after twenty years
- It's
stupid to believe
everything you hear
without
'to'
- I would rather
visit
Rome.
- She would
rather live
in Italy.
- Would
you rather eat
steak or fish?
- He would
rather work
in a bank.
- I'd rather
be
a forest than a tree.