Infinitive Verbs
1) Infinitive Verbs
Definition & Basic Structure.
An infinitive is the most basic form of a verb, typically preceded by the word “to.” Although it is formed from a verb, an infinitive does not function as the main action of a sentence (the finite verb); instead, it acts as a noun, adjective, or adverb.
to + verb (e.g., to eat, to sleep, to study)
2) The Functions of Infinitives
Versatile positions in a sentence.
| Function | Example | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| As a Noun (Subject) | To travel is her greatest dream. | Acts as the subject of the sentence. |
| As a Noun (Direct Object) | He decided to stay. | Receives the action of “decided”. |
| As an Adjective | I have some work to finish. | Modifies the noun “work”. |
| As an Adverb | She exercised to improve her health. | Explains why she exercised. |
3) The Three Types of Infinitives
Variations in structure.
| Type | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Full Infinitive | to + base verb | I want to learn French. |
| Bare Infinitive | base verb (no “to”) | She let him go. |
| Split Infinitive | to + adverb + verb | They decided to quickly finish the task. |
4) Key Usage Rules
Grammatical structures and specific patterns.
A) The Bare Infinitive
We omit the “to” in specific grammatical structures:
Can, could, may, might, shall, should, will, would, must.
- Correct: I can swim.
- Incorrect: I can to swim.
See, hear, feel, watch.
- Correct: I saw him cross the street.
- Correct: Don’t make me laugh.
- Note: “Help” can use both: Help me clean OR Help me to clean.
B) Negative and Comparison Rules
Place not immediately before the “to”.
- Positive: She told me to stay.
- Negative: She told me not to stay.
- Too + Adj + Infinitive: It is too cold to swim.
- Adj + Enough + Infinitive: He is brave enough to try.
C) After Specific Verbs
Certain verbs are almost always followed by an infinitive rather than a gerund (-ing):
- Agree, decide, hope, plan, refuse, want, promise.
- Example: “We plan to visit Japan next year.”
5) Infinitives vs. Gerunds
Contextual meaning changes.
While both can act as nouns, the choice depends on the preceding verb. Some verbs change meaning depending on which you use:
You paused your current activity in order to do something else.
- Stop to eat.
You finished the actual act of the verb.
- Stop eating.