Gerunds and Infinitives
Gerunds and Infinitives
Gerunds and Infinitives
INFINITIVES
GERUNDS (ING)
When a verb ends in -ing, it may be a
gerund or a present participle. It is
important to understand that they are not
the same.
When we use a verb in -ing form more like
a noun, it is usually a gerund:
Fishing is fun.
GERUNDS (ING)
When we use a verb in -ing form more like
a verb or an adjective, it is usually a
present participle:
Anthony is fishing.
I have a boring teacher.
GERUNDS AS SUBJECT,
OBJECT OR COMPLEMENT
Try to think of gerunds as verbs in noun form.
Like nouns, gerunds can be the subject, object or complement
of a sentence:
Smoking costs a lot of money.
I don't like writing.
My favourite occupation is reading.
But, like a verb, a gerund can also have an object itself. In this
case, the whole expression [gerund + object] can be the
subject, object or complement of the sentence.
Smoking cigarettes costs a lot of money.
I don't like writing letters.
My favorite occupation is reading detective stories.
GERUNDS AS SUBJECT,
OBJECT OR COMPLEMENT
Like nouns, we can use gerunds with adjectives
(including articles and other determiners):
pointless questioning
a settling of debts
the making of Titanic
But when we use a gerund with an article, it does not
usually take a direct object:
a settling of debts (not a settling debts)
Making "Titanic" was expensive.
The making of "Titanic" was expensive
GERUNDS AFTER
PREPOSITIONS
INFINITIVE
An infinitive is a verbal consisting of the word to
plus a verb (in its simplest "stem" form) and
functioning as a noun, adjective, or adverb. The
term verbal indicates that an infinitive, like the
other two kinds of verbal, is based on a verb and
therefore expresses action or a state of being.
However, the infinitive may function as a subject,
direct object, subject complement, adjective, or
adverb in a sentence. Although an infinitive is easy
to locate because of the to + verb form, deciding
what function it has in a sentence can sometimes
be confusing.
EXAMPLES
His ambition is to fly. (subject
complement)
He lacked the strength to resist. (adjective)
We must study to learn. (adverb)
Infinitives: to fly, to draw, to become, to
enter, to stand, to catch, to belong
Prepositional Phrases: to him, to the
committee, to my house, to the mountains,
to us, to this address
AN INFINITIVE PHRASE
Is a group of words consisting of an infinitive
and the modifier(s) and/or (pro)noun(s) or noun
phrase(s) that function as the actor(s), direct
object(s), indirect object(s), or complement(s) of
the action or state expressed in the infinitive,
such as:
We intended to leave early.
The infinitive phrase functions as the
direct object of the verb intended.
to leave (infinitive)
early (adverb)
POINTS TO REMEMBER
An infinitive is a verbal consisting of the
word to plus a verb; it may be used as a
noun, adjective, or adverb.
An infinitive phrase consists of an infinitive
plus modifier(s), object(s), complement(s),
and/or actor(s).
An infinitive phrase requires a comma only
if it is used as an adverb at the beginning
of a sentence.
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