Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Alanniayra
When to use 'to' and 'for'?
I've asked this question in a different category.
Could anyone help me?
9 mars 2012 19:36
Réponses · 2
1
They're two completely different words;
"to" is a preposition of movement (I am going to Mexico, I give it to him) which has loads of different uses that you can look up in a grammar book or website. It is also an indicator of the infinite of a verb ('to eat', 'to drink', 'to err is human'), "For" indicates intention towards rather than movement: "It's for us", "What did you go there for?"
It would take me an hour to explain the difference in general between the two of them as they're so different.
9 mars 2012
if you mean as a preposition after verbs it depends on the verb and the meaning, different idioms
9 mars 2012
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Alanniayra
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Français, Portugais, Espagnol
Langue étudiée
Français
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