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Brunces Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Using the preposition TO

Hello, friends.

I have two doubs about the preposition TO.

Doubt 1:

- I am used to driving long distances.

- They can go back to being friends.

When exactly do we use gerund after the preposition TO? How do we know we have to use infinitive or gerund? What are the rules?

Doubt 2:

- I don't speack French as well as I want to.

- Would you like to dance? / I'd love to.

When exactly do we use the preposition TO without a verb? Of course, the verb is implicit, but are there any rules which support that implicitness?

Thanks very much for your attention, guys.

brunces
  

Top answer

Hi Doubt 1 to be used to doing something. In this case, to is a preposition indeed, and as holds true for all prepositions, they cannot be followed by a to-infinitive or bare infinitive. g.

  • Hi Doubt 1 to be used to doing something.
  • In this case, to is a preposition indeed, and as holds true for all prepositions, they cannot be followed by a to-infinitive or bare infinitive.
  • g.
  • to go, to see, go, see ).
  • It must be followed by an -ing form (or gerund, if you like).
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2 Answers
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Hi

Doubt 1
  • to be used to doing something.
In this case, to is a preposition indeed, and as holds true for all prepositions, they cannot be followed by a to-infinitive or bare infinitive. (e.g. to go, to see, go, see). It must be followed by an -ing form (or gerund, if you like).

I think your confusion has to do with anot
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In the first case you are making a prepositional phrase and must use a noun to conclude the phrase. gerunds are verbs that have been conjugated (right word for this? converted perhaps) into nouns by the addition of ing, infinitives are not nouns and as such may not represent to object of a prepositional phrase-though i am still trying to find a case in which an infinitive might be incl

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