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infinitive
[in-fin-i-tiv]
noun
infin.
in English, the simple or basic form of a verb, with no endings to indicate the verb’s subject or tense, such as come, take, eat, be: used after auxiliary verbs or preceded by the word to, and sometimes functioning as a noun, such as He must be, I want to eat, To love is to understand.
a verb form found in many other languages that has a similar function, such as French venir “to come” or Latin esse “to be.”
adjective
consisting of or containing an infinitive: infin.
an infinitive construction.
infinitive
/ ɪnˈfɪnɪtɪv, ˌɪnfɪnɪˈtaɪvəl /
noun
a form of the verb not inflected for grammatical categories such as tense and person and used without an overt subject. In English, the infinitive usually consists of the word to followed by the verb
infinitive
The simple or dictionary form of a verb: walk, think, fly, exist. Often the word to marks a verb as an infinitive: “to walk,” “to think,” “to fly,” “to exist.”
Other Word Forms
- infinitively adverb
- infinitival adjective
- ˈھԾپ adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of infinitive1
Example Sentences
All other Greek dialects known today have stopped using the infinitive found in ancient Greek.
The NI Civil Service did remove the split infinitive of "to boldly go", replacing it with a more grammatically correct version.
Correct French would not have used the infinitive “tuer,” but rather the past participle, ending with an “e” to agree with the female writer, Ms. Marchal.
The app and browser extension works across programs and platforms, pointing out your split infinitives in emails, word processors, websites, or on social media.
Split infinitives in particular, he snaps, are “a thorn in my side.”
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When To Use
An infinitive is the basic form of a verb, having no tense and not being conjugated. In English, an infinitive is preceded by the word to.In English, the infinitive form of the verb is the one you will see listed in dictionaries like this one. When infinitives are used in sentences, they follow auxiliary verbs, as in I should try, or function words, as in I want to sleep.Infinitives can serve other purposes as well, such as acting like nouns (To err is human), adjectives (I have no place to sleep), or adverbs (We eat to live).
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