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1.2 Reproduce the dialogue.

2. Respond to this stimulus using it’s time, had better, would rather/sooner, as if/as though, even if/even though to express the indicated meaning.

You are sick and tired of your job as an accountant. And you start thinking of changing it. What career would you take up instead?

1. Advice: …

2. Criticism: …

3. Preference: …

4. Comparison: …

5. Concession: …

PART II. VERBALS

Unit 1. The use of the Infinitive in English. Its Forms and Functions

Grammar Introduction

1. Read the text and answer the questions.

a. What do the forms in italics have in common?

b. Find out the rest of similar verbal forms in the text.

In India all children are supposed to go to school between the ages of six and fourteen. In fact in the countryside it is very difficult for young children to get an education because the government has failed to build enough schools, and also because transport is difficult, and children need to take the bus to get to school. There are few buses, so most children go on foot. On top of all these problems, many parents never went to school themselves, so they don’t expect their children to go. Many parents are also so poor that they don’t let their children go to school but prefer to send them to work instead, because they need the money. Children from richer families, on the other hand, live near good schools, and their parents encourage them to pass their exams so that they can get good jobs.

2. Read the following sentences, paying attention to the form and the use of the Infinitive. Translate the sentences into Russian.

1. He seems to be playing tennis now.

2. I’m sorry to have done it.

3. What has made her leave us so soon?

4. Carol didn’t want to bother anyone.

5. The work seems to have been done in haste.

6. She wanted desperately to help him.

7. She heard him open the door.

8. I don’t know what to say.

9. Young children often ask to be taken to the zoo.

10. I’d like to book a return ticket to Denver, please.

What are the Infinitive forms employed to express different kinds of actions?

Grammar Explanations A

1. There are the following forms of the Infinitive:

Active

Passive

Present Indefinite

(to) repair

(to) be repaired

Present Continuous

(to) be repairing

Perfect

(to) have repaired

(to) have been repaired

Perfect Continuous

(to) have been repairing

Passive Present Continuous and Perfect Continuous are very rarely used.

We use Present Indefinite Infinitive Active and Passive and Present Continuous Infinitive Active to express an action simultaneous with the action expressed by the predicate:

The article was to be translated yesterday.

She is said to be translating the article now.

Статью нужно было перевести вчера.

Говорят, что она переводит эту статью сейчас.

We use Perfect Infinitive Active and Passive and Perfect Continuous Infinitive to express an action prior to the action expressed by the predicate:

He claimed to have been badly

treated.

It seems to have been snowing

ever since we came here.

Он пожаловался, что с ним плохо обошлись.

Кажется, снег идёт с той самой минуты,

как мы приехали сюда.

2. We use the Infinitive without the particle to in the following cases:

a) after auxiliary verbs:

I didn’t go to the Crimea last summer.

It will be frosty tomorrow.

b) after some modal verbs:

He can do this job well.

Shall I open the window?

c) after verbs denoting perception such as feel, hear, notice, observe, see, watch, regard (in the active voice):

Did you notice the boys go out?

I saw him cross the street.

But in the passive the Infinitive is used with to:

He was noticed to leave the house.

d) after the verb let:

Let me know whatever happens.

e) after the verb make (заставлять) in the active voice:

What makes you think so?

But in the passive the Infinitive is used with to:

He was made to repeat the rule.

f) after the verb help (the omission of the particle to after the verb help is more usual in American than in British usage):

I helped Nick find his things.

g) in infinitive sentences beginning with why:

Why not accept their invitation?

h) after the expressions had better, would rather, would sooner, cannot but, nothing but, cannot choose but:

You had better not tell him about it.

Notes:

1. After the modal verbs ought to, should, could and the verbs expressing hope or intention, e.g. hope, intend, mean (=intend) the perfect form denotes an action that was not fulfilled:

a) You could have helped them (but you didn't).- Вы могли бы помочь им.

b) I intended to have helped them (but I didn't).- Я намеревался (было) помочь им.

2. With the modal verbs must, may (might) the perfect form of the infinitive expresses probability with regard to a prior action.

She must have forgotten to ring them up.- Она, должно быть, забыла позвонить им.

3. There are certain verbs followed by the Infinitive

agree

appear

arrange

ask

attempt

beg

can/cannot afford

care

chance

choose

claim

come

consent

dare

decide

demand

deserve

determine

elect

expect

fail

get

grow up

guarantee

hesitate

hope

hurry

incline

learn

manage

mean (=intend)

need

neglect

offer

pay

plan

prepare

pretend

promise

prove

refuse

remain

request

resolve

say

seek

seem

strive

struggle

swear

tend

threaten

turn out

venture

volunteer

wait

want

wish

would like

yearn

Grammar Practice A