Robson Leonel Branco
When I say: Emily's effort was vital to make all those things to happen or Emily's effort was vital to make all those things happen. Can I ommit "to" our "use "to" whenever I want? Will the sense be changed?
17 Thg 11 2023 13:52
Câu trả lời · 13
1
You need the first "to" in "to make", but "to happen" should just be "happen." You need to use the base verb after modal verbs like "make" or "let", not the full infinitive with "to."
17 tháng 11 năm 2023
1
Modals and a few other verbs take a bare infinitive without "to": "May I dance?" "Let me speak" "Make it happen" "See him run" or "watch him run" "Hear her sing" or "listen to her sing" Other verbs need "to": "Permit me to dance" "Allow me to speak" "Do you want it to happen?" "Encourage him to run." "She hopes to sing" Unfortunately, you have no choice. You have to do it that way. There are only a handful of verbs that don't take "to", so it's not hard to remember them.
18 tháng 11 năm 2023
When you use “to + infinitive” with “make”, it has a different meaning. For example, if I say “I made cookies to give to the children”, it means “giving to the children” is the reason why I made the cookies.
18 tháng 11 năm 2023
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