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RS: A gerund, remember, is a verb ending in -ing
but used as a noun. An infinitive is a verb with the preposition "to" as
in to go, to swim, to walk.
AA: Huy Doan in Vietnam asks about the verb "regret." He wants to
know if the verb that follows it should be a gerund or an infinitive,
and what's the difference? We asked Lida.
LIDA BAKER: "If we have a sentence like 'I regret
to inform you that you have not been accepted to the university of your
choice,' that's a correct sentence. In contrast to that, if we say
something like 'I regret buying that car,' that's also a correct
sentence. So what's the difference? OK, with this verb, and with a few
other verbs, the choice of infinitive or gerund has to do with which
event happened first. If I say 'I regret buying that car,' what happened
first?"
AA: "You bought the car."
LIDA BAKER: "I bought the car. And later I regretted it. Now let me
give you a clearer example of that: 'I stopped smoking' versus 'I
stopped to smoke.'"
RS: "Alright ... "
AA: "Ohhh."
RS: "Right, 'I stopped smoking' means 'I don't smoke anymore' and 'I stopped to smoke' means I stopped ... "
AA: "To go smoke a cigarette out on the street."
RS: "It's very tricky."
LIDA BAKER: "That's very tricky and very, very -- a pitfall for
students. Let's see if we can form some kind of a generalization from
this, OK? Basically some verbs must have a gerund after them. Some verbs
must have an infinitive after them. And some verbs can have both.
"Of the verbs that can have both a gerund and an infinitive after
them, sometimes there is no difference in meaning. But sometimes there
is a big difference in meaning, as we just saw in the example of 'I
stopped smoking/I stopped to smoke.' So those are the four classes of
uses of infinitives and gerunds in object position, alright?"
AA: "How do you learn them?"
LIDA BAKER: "The learner first of all has to know that there is such a
thing as a gerund, there is such a thing as an infinitive, that they
can occur in subject position, that they can occur following the verb in
a variety of positions. So the learner first of all needs
consciousness-raising. You know, what are the options?"
RS: "So should a student, once he has that overview, get out a list of words and start memorizing?"
LIDA BAKER: "No, that is not the best way to learn infinitives and
gerunds -- although, interestingly, when I started teaching many, many,
many years ago, typically what textbooks would have would be a list of
verbs in alphabetical order. You know, you'd have a list of verbs that
are followed by gerunds and a list of verbs that are followed by
infinitives. The student would have no choice but just to memorize them.
"Since then, what linguists have learned, or have figured out, is
that infinitives and gerunds very often fall into meaning categories.
For example, there are a whole bunch of verbs that are generally used
with the meaning of communicating something that are all followed by
gerunds. I'll give you a couple of examples. To recommend: 'My best
friend recommended seeing a doctor.' Or the verb suggest: 'He suggested
leaving early in order to avoid the traffic.'
"So, many textbooks nowadays present the verbs which are followed by
gerunds versus the verbs that are followed by infinitives in terms of
meaning categories, OK? Then there is a category of verbs of choice or
intention, that have that meaning, so verbs like choose or decide or
refuse. They're followed directly by the infinitive. So: 'He decided to
go,' 'He expected to receive a letter from his mother.' The point is
that infinitives and gerunds can be learned alphabetically, like you
mentioned, but they can also be learned in categories."
AA: Lida Baker writes textbooks for English learners and teaches at
the American Language Center at the University of California, Los
Angeles. We have the first part of this topic, and all of her previous
segments, on our Web site, voanews.com/wordmaster.
RS: And our e-mail address is word@voanews.com. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.
(Source: VOA/WORDMASTER)
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