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For words also cross borders. | Porque las palabras también cruzan fronteras.


Gerund or Infinitive?

Gerunds are verbs ending in -ing that act as nouns in a sentence. They take on roles like subject, object, or complement.

An infinitive is the base form of a verb , usually preceded by “to” (e.g., to eat, to sleep), acting as a noun, adjective, or adverb rather than the main conjugated verb.

Gerunds

We use gerunds (verb + ing):

  • After certain verbs – I enjoy singing.
  • After prepositions – I drank a cup of coffee before leaving.
  • As the subject or object of a sentence – Swimming is good exercise.

to-infinitive

We use ‘to’ + infinitive:

  • After certain verbs – We decided to leave.
  • After many adjectives – It’s difficult to get up early.
  • To show purpose – I came to London to study English.

Bare infinitive

We use the bare infinitive (the infinitive without ‘to’):

  • After modal verbs – I can meet you at six o’clock.
  • After ‘let’, ‘make’ and (sometimes) ‘help’ – The teacher let us leave early.
  • After some verbs of perception (see, watch, hear, notice, feel, sense) – I watched her walk away.
  • After expressions with ‘why’ – Why go out the night before an exam?

Descarga mi lista de los 20 verbos más utilizados en alemán, español e inglés. ¡Es gratis!

*Al descargar la lista acepto la Política de Privacidad. La lista incluye conjugaciones y ejemplos.

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Ale Yass

Soy profesor de idiomas certificado por Cambridge University Press (Reino Unido) y el Instituto Cervantes (España); así como traductor especializado en documentos técnico-comerciales. Aprende un idioma, obtén tu certificado o traduce tus documentos conmigo.

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