DELARAM
When I can not use to after want? Give me more Ex please
7. März 2019 11:00
Antworten · 6
1
If you use a verb after 'want' ( saying what you want to DO), this needs to be an infinitive with 'to'. For example: I want to go home. I want to see this film. I want to be a journalist. You cannot say 'I want go', 'I want see' or 'I want be' - all of these are wrong. If you have a noun after 'want' (saying what you want to HAVE), you don't use 'to'. For example: I want a break. I want orange juice. I want more money. I want some advice. Does that make sense? ................................................. NB The only time that you'll come across a verb in a different form after 'want' is in colloquial English where 'want' means 'require'. For example 'My car wants washing' ( More unusually, in non-standard 'dialect' in Scotland and Ireland and a few parts of N. America, you might even hear 'My car wants washed'). I wouldn't worry about either of these idiomatic uses, though.
7. März 2019
Another instance in which you cannot use TO immediately after want is when you want somebody else to do something . For example, I want HIM to come with me
7. März 2019
After want you are compelled to use to
7. März 2019
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!