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Ihan
When I use "want to" and when I use only "want"? I'm really bad with these simple things
Be free to corrects me
2012年11月11日 02:11
回答 · 4
2
Hi,
"want' is followed by a noun, and "want to" is followed by a verb.
"want" + noun:
I want something.
I want a new bike.
I want pizza.
I want coffee.
"want to" + verb:
I want to do something.
I want to buy a new bike.
I want to eat pizza.
I want to drink coffee.
I hope that helps!
2012年11月11日
1
"to" is part of a verb in the infinitive form.
"I want to do something"
I = pronoun (subject)
want = verb
to do = verb in infinitive form
something = noun (object)
in spoken English, colloquially, we sometimes drop the last part of the infinitive verb, if it's understood.
So a conversation like this:
A: Do you want to swim?
B: Yes, I want to swim.
is usually said:
A: Do you want to swim?
B: Yes, I want to!
(B did not need to say swim, A already knows what word comes next!)
So you will often hear "to" at the end of a sentence, like "I want to". But it's incorrect English, just that we shorten this kind of sentence when speaking casually.
2012年11月11日
'To' é parte do infintivo em inglês
Veja estes exemplos...
Eu quero... + infinitivo ou substantivo.
....aprender inglês.
....melhorar meu inglês.
....um café.
I want... + infinitive or noun.
...to learn English.
...to improve my English.
...a coffee.
Mas, o assunto é um pouco diferente quando se usar certos verbos conhecidos como 'verbos modais'.
Tais como: will, would, should, must, can, could, may, might.
Neste caso o infintivo é usado sem a palavra 'to'.
Veja o seguinte.
I must...
I can....
I will....
I should...
...learn English.
...improve my English.
Este assunto pode parecer um tanto confuso. Espero que esta explição deixe o assunto um pouco mais claro. Caso contrário, entre em contato comigo.
2012年11月11日
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