W języku angielskim po czasowniku może wystąpić:
to-infinitive
-ing (gerund)
dowolna forma (to lub -ing) – bez zmiany znaczenia
to lub -ing, ale ZMIENIA się znaczenie
To cztery najważniejsze grupy, na których opiera się 90% verb patterns. Tu omówimy pierwsze trzy, czwarta znajduje się TUTAJ.
To najbardziej „logiczna” grupa: mówimy o celu, zamiarze, decyzji, planie, więc naturalnie idzie to + verb.
| Czasownik | Przykład |
|---|---|
| want to | I want to go. |
| need to | She needs to study. |
| decide to | They decided to leave. |
| plan to | I plan to visit London. |
| learn to | He’s learning to drive. |
| pretend to | She pretended to be sick. |
| promise to | He promised to help. |
| hope to | I hope to see you. |
| offer to | They offered to cook. |
| refuse to | She refused to answer. |
Ta grupa obejmuje czasowniki opisujące przyjemność, unikanie, wspomnienia, kończenie, rozważanie.
| Czasownik | Przykład |
|---|---|
| enjoy | I enjoy reading. |
| love / like* | She likes swimming. |
| hate | I hate waiting. |
| avoid | He avoids speaking in public. |
| mind | Do you mind opening the window? |
| finish | We finished eating. |
| keep | Keep studying. |
| consider | I’m considering moving. |
| suggest | She suggested going home. |
| recommend | I recommend trying this. |
| deny | He denied stealing the money. |
Najważniejsza informacja:
Ta sama treść → dwa warianty → różnica tylko stylistyczna.
| Czasownik | Przykład z -ing | Przykład z to-infinitive |
|---|---|---|
| like | I like swimming. | I like to swim. |
| love | She loves dancing. | She loves to dance. |
| hate | I hate waiting. | I hate to wait. |
| prefer | They prefer watching films. | They prefer to watch films. |
| begin | It began raining. | It began to rain. |
| start | He started running. | He started to run. |
| continue | She continued talking. | She continued to talk. |
W praktyce formy -ing brzmią bardziej naturalnie.