Sorry! Search is currently unavailable while the database is being updated, it will be back in 5 mins!

Infinitive Verbs - Part 2

Infinitive Verbs - Part 1

An infinitive verb is the plain form of a verb that is not conjugated and often has the word "to" before it. It is good to know the plain or base form of a verb, since that is the form that is typically the main listing for the word in a dictionary. You may hear the infinitive "to sit" conjugated as "sat" or "sitting," but the form of the word you will need if you care to look it up is the infinitive "sit." In standard usage, the infinitive will always be preceded by another verb.

BANNER PLACEHOLDER

An infinitive is often used in a sentence in combination with a conjugated from of "to be." In these examples, the subject "it" is used to make general observations: 

 

It is going to blow up!

Caption 37, Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives - Pam's Trinidadian Caribbean Kitchen

 Play Caption

 

It's going to boil down.

Caption 6, Cooking with Aria - French Toast and a Berry Topping

 Play Caption

 

It is not enough to obey Big Brother.

Caption 15, George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four - BBC TV Movie

 Play Caption

 

"The world is watching. It's time to detox."

-Greenpeace: Detox How People Power is Cleaning Up Fashion

 

The infinitives are written in bold above: to blow up, to boil, to obey, and to detox.

BANNER PLACEHOLDER

 

Further Learning
Read this in-depth article on infinitive verbs, then search for examples on Yabla English to see them used in a real-world context. 

Vous aimerez aussi