The uninflected form of a verb. In English, this is usually formed with the verb stem preceded by 'to'. e.g. 'to sit'
An infinitive form of the verb; a verb in the infinitive mood; the infinitive mood
The name or base form of the verb with to Infinitives can be used as a noun: His objective was to hit the ball over the fence
The uninflected form of a verb. In English, this is usually formed with the verb stem preceded by to
An infinitve is composed of the word "to" immediately followed a verb with no endings Infinitives can perform any sentence function except that of predicate
the uninflected form of the verb not having inflections to indicate tense formed with the infinitive; "an infinitive phrase
(in-fin-ni-tiv) In grammar an infinitive is the simple form of the verb, usually prefaced by the word to
The second word is the predicate of an infinitive in one of the first word's cases (Tone `-' )
The infinitive of a verb is the basic form, for example `do', `be', `take', and `eat'. The infinitive is often used with `to' in front of it. in grammar, the basic form of a verb, used with 'to' in English. In the sentence 'I want to watch television.' 'to watch' is an infinitive split infinitive (infinitivus, from infinitus; because the verb is not limited by person or number)
An infinitive is a verbal that is identified by the word "to" preceding the base form of the verb Examples of infinitives include to run, to seek, and to find
a verbal; to plus the base form of the verb Ex : I love to dance a verbal; to plus the base form of the verb Ex : I love to dance