BARE INFINITIVE, TO |
BARE INFINITIVE, TO
— . « ?» « ?» to, , , . , to , bare infinitive.
, to , .
to , bare infinitive. will, would, shall, should, may, might, can, could, must needn’t.
I can tell you where he is if you like. — , , .
You must obey my instructions. — .
You should come to school in time. — .
I might walk there if it doesn’t rain. — , .
He needn’t know I’m here. — , .
see (), watch (), notice (), observe (), feel (), hear (). , to.
I watched him move to a seat at the back. — , .
He heard the teacher call his name. — , .
We felt the ground shake beneath our feet. — , .
! , to.
He was noticed to buy sweets every day. — , .
why
why , - . why not.
Why write when you can type? — , ?
Why take a taxi? We can walk home. — ? .
Why not wait until tomorrow? — ?
, - . : , , . let, make, have. , bare infinitive .
She made the children do their homework. — .
Mary let me use her new laptop. — .
The lawyer had his assistant make copies of the contract. — .
— had better would rather. . Had better , , - , . Would rather , , - ; .
He would rather play than work. — , .
It’s cold. The children had better wear their coats. — . .
except, but than.
She would prefer to stay single than marry that man. — , .
He manages to do everything except get enough rest. — , .
We don’t do anything on weekends but watch TV shows. — , .
, and or, to, — .
He decided to put aside everything and go home. — .
I want you to water the flowers and take out the trash today. — , .