Dictionary Definition
infinitive adj
1 formed with the infinitive; "an infinitive
phrase"
2 not having inflections to indicate tense n :
the uninflected form of the verb
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ɪnfɪnɪtɪv/ or
Noun
infinitive (plural infinitives)- The uninflected form of a verb. In English, this is usually formed with the verb stem preceded by 'to'.
- A verbal noun formed from the infinitive of a verb
Translations
- Catalan: infinitiu
- Czech: neurčitek
- Dutch: infinitief , onbepaalde wijs
- Finnish: infinitiivi
- French: infinitif
- German: Infinitiv
- Hebrew: שם הפועל
- Icelandic: nafnháttur
- Italian: infinito
- Japanese: 不定詞 (ふていし, futeishi)
- Norwegian: infinitiv
- Polish: bezokolicznik
- Romanian: infinitiv
- Russian: неопределённая форма (neopredeljónnaja fórma)
- Spanish: infinitivo
- Swedish: infinitiv
Adjective
infinitive (uncomparable)- Formed with the infinitive
French
Adjective
infinitive- feminine of infinitif
Noun
infinitive f- infinitive clause (=proposition infinitive)
Extensive Definition
In grammar, infinitive is the name
for certain verb forms that exist in many languages. In the usual
(traditional) description of English,
the infinitive of a verb is its basic form with or without the
particle
to: therefore, do and to do, be and to be, and so on are
infinitives. As with many linguistic concepts, there is not a
single definition of infinitive that applies to all languages;
however, in languages that have infinitives, they generally have
most of the following properties:
- In most of their uses, infinitives are non-finite verbs.
- They function as other lexical categories — usually nouns — within the clauses that contain them, for example by serving as the subject of another verb.
- They do not represent any of the verb's arguments (as employer and employee do).
- They are not inflected to agree with any subject, and their subject, if they have one, is not case-marked as such.
- They cannot serve as the only verb of a declarative sentence.
- They are the verb's lemma, citation form, and/or name; that is, they are regarded as its basic uninflected form, and/or they are used in giving its definition or conjugation.
- They do not have tense, aspect, moods, and/or voice, or they are limited in the range of tenses, aspects, moods, and/or voices that they can use. (In languages where infinitives do not have moods at all, they are usually treated as being their own non-finite mood.)
- They are used with auxiliary verbs.
However, it bears repeating that none of the
above is a defining quality of the infinitive; infinitives do not
have all these properties in every language, as it is shown below,
and other verb forms may have one or more of them. For example,
English gerunds and
participles have most
of these properties as well.
Infinitives in English
English
has three non-finite verbal forms, but by long-standing convention,
the term "infinitive" is applied to only one of these. (The other
two are the past- and present-participle forms, where the
present-participle form is also the gerund form.) In English, a
verb's infinitive is its unmarked form, such as be, do, have, or
sit, often introduced by the particle
to. When this particle is absent, the infinitive is said to be a
bare infinitive; when it is present, it is generally considered to
be a part of the infinitive, then known as the full infinitive (or
to-infinitive), and there is a controversy about whether it should
be separated from the main word of the infinitive. (See Split
infinitive.) Nonetheless, modern theories typically do not
consider the to-infinitive to be a distinct constituent,
instead taking the particle to to operate on an entire verb phrase;
so, to buy a car is parsed as to , not as .
The bare infinitive and the full infinitive are
in complementary
distribution. They are not generally interchangeable, but the
distinction does not generally affect the meaning of a sentence;
rather, certain contexts call almost exclusively for the bare
infinitive, and all other contexts call for the full
infinitive.
Huddleston
and Pullum's
recent Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (CGEL) does not
use the notion of the infinitive, arguing that English uses the
same form of the verb, the plain form, in infinitival clauses that
it uses in imperative
and present-subjunctive clauses.
Uses of the bare infinitive
The bare infinitive is used in a rather limited
number of contexts, but some of these are quite common:
- The bare infinitive is used as the main verb after the dummy auxiliary verb do, or any modal auxiliary verb (such as will, can, or should), except that ought usually takes a to-infinitive. So, "I will/do/can/etc. see it."
- Several common verbs of perception, including see, watch, hear, feel, and sense take a direct object and a bare infinitive, where the bare infinitive indicates an action taken by the main verb's direct object. So, "I saw/watched/heard/etc. it happen." (A similar meaning can be effected by using the present participle instead: "I saw/watched/heard/etc. it happening." The difference is that the former implies that the entirety of the event was perceived, while the latter implies that part of the progress of the event was perceived.)
- Similarly with several common verbs of permission or causation, including make, bid, let, and have. So, "I made/bade/let/had him do it." (However, make takes a to-infinitive in the passive voice: "I was made to do it.")
- The bare infinitive is the dictionary form of a verb, and is generally the form of a verb that receives a definition; however, the definition itself generally uses a to-infinitive. So, "The word amble means 'to walk slowly.'"
- The bare infinitive form is also the present subjunctive form and the imperative form, although most grammarians do not consider uses of the present subjunctive or imperative to be uses of the bare infinitive.
Uses of the full infinitive
The full infinitive (or to-infinitive) is used in
a great many different contexts:
- Outside of dictionary headwords, it is the most commonly used citation form of the English verb: "How do we conjugate the verb to go?"
- It can be used like a noun phrase, expressing its action or state in an abstract, general way. So, "To err is human"; "To know me is to love me". (However, a gerund is often preferred for this — "Being is doing" would be more natural than the abstract and philosophical sounding "To be is to do.")
- It can be used like an adjective or adverb, expressing purpose or intent. So, "The letter says I'm to wait outside", or "He is the man to talk to", or "[In order] to meditate, one must free one's mind."
- In either of the above uses, it can often be given a subject using the preposition for: "For him to fail now would be a great disappointment"; "[In order] for you to get there on time, you'll need to leave now." (The former sentence could also be written, "His failing now would be a great disappointment.")
- It can be used after many intransitive verbs; in this case, it generally has the subject of the main verb as its implicit subject. So, "I agreed to leave", or "He failed to make his case." (This may be considered a special case of the noun-like use above.) With some verbs the infinitive may carry a significantly different meaning from a gerund: compare I stopped to talk to her with I stopped talking to her, or I forgot to buy the bread with I forgot buying the bread.
- It can be used after the direct objects of many transitive verbs; in this case, it generally has the direct object of the main verb as its implicit subject. So, "I convinced him to leave with me", or "He asked her to make his case on his behalf."
- As a special case of the above, it can often be used after an intransitive verb, together with a subject using the preposition for: "I arranged for him to accompany me", or "I waited for summer to arrive."
When the verb is implied, some dialects will
reduce the to-infinitive to simply to: "Do I have to?"
The infinitive with auxiliary verbs
The auxiliary verb do does not have an infinitive
— even though do is also a main verb and in that sense is often
used in the infinitive. One does not say *I asked to do not have
to, but rather, either I asked not to have to or I asked to not
have to (but see split
infinitive). Similarly, one cannot emphasize an infinitive
using do; one cannot say, "I hear him do say it all the
time."
Nonetheless, the auxiliary verbs have (used to
form the perfect
aspect) and be (used to form the passive
voice and continuous
aspect) both commonly appear in the infinitive: "It's thought
to have been a ceremonial site", or "I want to be doing it
already."
Defective verbs
The modal
auxiliary verbs, can, may, shall, will and must are defective
in that they do not have infinitives; so, one cannot say, *I want
him to can do it, but rather must say, I want him to be able to do
it. The periphrases
to be able to, to have to and to be going to are generally used in
these cases.
Germanic languages
The original Germanic suffix of the infinitive
was -an, with verbs derived from other words ending in -jan or
-janan. In German it
is -en ("sagen"), with -eln or -ern endings on a few words based on
-l or -r roots ("segeln", "ändern"). The use of zu with infinitives
is similar to English to, but is less frequent than in English.
German infinitives can function as nouns, often expressing
abstractions of the action, in which case they are of neuter
gender: das Essen means the eating, but also the food. In Dutch
infinitives also end in -en (zeggen — to say), sometimes used with
te similar to English to, e.g. "Het is niet moeilijk te begrijpen"
→ "It is not difficult to understand." The few verbs with stems
ending in -a have infinitives in -n (gaan — to go, slaan — to hit).
In Scandinavian languages the n has dropped out and the infinitive
suffix has been reduced to -e or -a. The infinitives of these
languages are inflected for passive voice through the addition of
-s to the active form. Afrikaans has
lost the distinction between the infinitive and present forms of
verbs, with the exception of the verbs "wees" (to be), which admits
the present form "is", and the verb "hê" (to have), whose present
form is "het".
Latin and Romance languages
The formation of the infinitive in the Romance
languages reflects that in their ancestor, Latin, in which
almost all verbs had an infinitive ending with -re (preceded by one
of various thematic vowels). For example, in Spanish
and Portuguese,
infinitives mostly end in -ar, -er, or -ir. In Romanian
the so-called "long infinitives" end in -are, -ere, -eare, -ire
(just like Italian), but these are also often used as feminine
nouns, and are treated exactly as feminine nouns. The "short
infinitives" used in verbal contexts (e.g. after an auxiliary verb)
have the endings -(e)a, -e, and -i. In all Romance languages,
infinitives can also be used as nouns.
Latin infinitives challenged several of the
generalizations about infinitives. They did inflect for voice
(amare, "to love", amari, to be loved) and for aspect
(amare, "to love", amavisse, "to have loved"), and allowed for an
overt expression of the subject (video Socratem currere, "I see
Socrates running").
Romance languages inherited from Latin the
possibility of an overt expression of the subject. Moreover, the
"inflected infinitive" (or "personal infinitive") found in
Portuguese, Galician,
and (some varieties of) Sardinian
inflects for person and number. These are the only Indo-European
languages that allow infinitives to take person and number
endings. This helps to make infinitive clauses very common in these
languages; for example, the English finite clause in order that
you/she/we have... would be translated to Portuguese as para
teres/ela ter/termos... (it is a null-subject
language). The Portuguese personal infinitive has no proper
tenses, only aspects (imperfect and perfect), but tenses can be
expressed using periphrastic structures. For
instance, even though you sing/have sung/are going to sing could be
translated to apesar de cantares/teres cantado/ires cantar.
Other Romance languages (including Spanish,
Romanian, Catalan, and some Italian dialects) allow uninflected
infinitives to combine with overt nominative subjects. For example,
Spanish al abrir yo los ojos ("when I opened my eyes") or sin yo
saberlo ("without my knowing about it").
Balto-Slavic languages
The infinitive in Russian
usually ends in -t’ (ть) preceded by a thematic
vowel; some verbs have a stem ending in a consonant and change
the t to ch, such as *mogt’ → moč’ (*могть → мочь) "can".
Some other Balto-Slavic
languages have the infinitive typically ending in, for example,
-ć (sometimes -c) in Polish,
-t’ in Slovak,
-t (formerly -ti) in Czech and
Latvian
(with a handful ending in -s on the latter), -ty (-ти) in Ukrainian,
-ць (-ts) in Belarusian.
Serbo-Croatian officially retains the infinitive -ti or -ći, but is
more flexible than the other Slavs in breaking the infinitive
through a clause, especially in Serbian variant, but nevertheless
the infinitive is always found in dictionaries and in language
textbooks. Slovennian and Lithuanian infinitives also end in -ti
like Serbo-Croatian.
Bulgarian
and Macedonian
have lost the infinitive altogether and, for that reason, books
concerning these two languages put the present (if imperferctive)
or simple future (if perfective) first-person singular
conjugation.
Hebrew
Hebrew
has two infinitives, the infinitive absolute and the infinitive
construct. The infinitive construct is used after prepositions and
is inflected with pronominal endings to indicate its subject or
object: bikhtōbh hassōphēr "when the scribe wrote", ahare lekhtō
"after his going". When the infinitive construct is preceded by ל
(lə-, li-, lā-) "to", it has a similar meaning as the English
to-infinitive, and this is its most frequent use in Modern Hebrew.
The infinitive absolute is used to add emphasis or certainty to the
verb, as in מות ימות mōth yāmūth (literally "die he will die";
figuratively, "he shall indeed die"). This construction is
analogous to English cognate
object constructions, as in he slept a sleep of peace. This
usage is commonplace in the Bible, but in Modern Hebrew it is
restricted to high-flown literary works.
Note, however, that the to-infinitive of Hebrew
is not the dictionary
form; that is the third person singular perfect form.
Finnish
To form the first infinitive, the strong form of the root (without consonant gradation or epenthetic 'e') is used, and these changes occur:- the root is suffixed with -ta/-tä according to vowel harmony
- consonant elision takes place if applicable, e.g. juoks+ta → juosta
- assimilation of clusters violating sonority hierarchy if applicable, e.g. nuol+ta → nuolla, sur+ta → surra
- 't' weakens to 'd' after diphthongs, e.g. juo+ta → juoda
- 't' elides if intervocalic, e.g. kirjoitta+ta → kirjoittaa
As such, it is inconvenient for dictionary use,
because the imperative would be closer to the root word.
Nevertheless, dictionaries use the first infinitive.
There are four other infinitives, which create a
noun-, or adverb-like word from the verb. For example, the third
infinitive is -ma/-mä, which creates an adjective-like word like
"written" from "write": kirjoita- becomes kirjoittama.
Seri
The Seri language of northwestern Mexico has infinitival forms which are used in two constructions (with the verb meaning 'want' and with the verb meaning 'be able'). The infinitive is formed by adding a prefix to the stem: either iha- [iʔa-] (plus a vowel change of certain vowel-initial stems) if the complement clause is transitive, or ica- [ika-] (and no vowel change) if the complement clause is intransitive. The infinitive shows agreement in number with the controlling subject. Examples are: icatax ihmiimzo 'I want to go', where icatax is the singular infinitive of the verb 'go' (singular root is -atax), and icalx hamiimcajc 'we want to go', where icalx is the plural infinitive. Examples of the transitive infinitive: ihaho 'to see it/him/her/them' (root -aho), and ihacta 'to look at it/him/her/them' (root -oocta).Translation to languages without an infinitive
In languages without an infinitive, the
infinitive is translated either as a that-clause or as a verbal noun.
For example, in Literary Arabic the sentence "I want to write a
book" is translated as either urīdu an aktuba kitāban (literally "I
want that I should write a book", with a verb in the subjunctive
mood) or urīdu kitābata kitābin (literally "I want the writing
of a book", with the masdar or verbal noun), and in Demotic Arabic
biddi aktob kitāb (subordinate clause with verb in subjunctive).
Similarly, the modern Greek for "I want to write", as opposed to
the ancient Greek θέλω γράφειν/-ψειν> with the infinitive, is
θέλω να γράφω/-ψω>, which is literally "I want that I should
write".
Even in languages that have infinitives, similar
constructions are sometimes necessary where English would allow the
infinitive. For example, in French the sentence "I want you to
come" translates to Je veux que vous veniez (literally "I want that
you come", with come being in the subjunctive mood). However, "I
want to come" is simply Je veux venir, using the infinitive, just
as in English. In Russian, sentences such as "I want you to leave"
do not make use of the infinitive form. Rather, they contain the
conjunction чтобы "in order to/so that" and the past tense form of
the verb: "Я хочу чтобы вы ушли" (lit. "I want so that you
left").
Notes
infinitive in Tosk Albanian: Infinitiv
infinitive in Catalan: Infinitiu
infinitive in Chuvash: Инфинитив
infinitive in Czech: Infinitiv
infinitive in Danish: Infinitiv
infinitive in German: Infinitiv
infinitive in Modern Greek (1453-):
Απαρέμφατο
infinitive in Spanish: Infinitivo
infinitive in Esperanto: Infinitivo
infinitive in French: Infinitif
infinitive in Croatian: Infinitiv
infinitive in Italian: Infinito (modo)
infinitive in Hebrew: שם הפועל
infinitive in Icelandic: Nafnháttur
infinitive in Lithuanian: Bendratis
infinitive in Dutch: Infinitief
infinitive in Japanese: 不定詞
infinitive in Norwegian: Infinitiv
infinitive in Norwegian Nynorsk: Infinitiv
infinitive in Polish: Bezokolicznik
infinitive in Portuguese: Infinitivo
infinitive in Russian: Инфинитив
infinitive in Simple English: Infinitive
infinitive in Serbian: Инфинитив
infinitive in Finnish: Infinitiivi
infinitive in Swedish: Infinitiv
infinitive in Ukrainian: Інфінітив
infinitive in Yiddish: שם פועל
infinitive in Chinese: 动词不定式