ဟုတ်ကဲ့ပါ အောက်မှာ အသုံးပြပုံ တချို့လေးပါ 1. With the Infinitive (to + verb): Allow + object + to-infinitive This structure is used when there is a clear subject (the person or thing being allowed). Examples: The teacher allowed us to leave early. They don't allow people to park here. My parents allowed me to travel abroad. 2. With the Gerund (-ing form): Allow + gerund This structure is used when there is no direct object, and you're speaking in general terms. Examples: This hotel doesn't allow smoking. They allow fishing in the lake. Some companies don't allow taking photos inside. Key Difference: Use to + verb when there’s a subject (someone being allowed to do something). Example: The teacher allowed the students to talk. Use -ing when there’s no subject and you're talking about a general activity. Example: The school doesn't allow chewing gum.
Infinitive: "to learn" Gerund: "learning" Your sentence "I have been learning English for years" uses the gerund "learning" to indicate the ongoing action of acquiring knowledge.
@MinThant-zj2of8 ай бұрын
Linfinitive က verb zero နက်တူတူပဲလာမလို့ပြောပြပေပါအုံးဆရာမ
@DoubleWai-cc2oo6 ай бұрын
တူ
@easyenglishmyanmar5 ай бұрын
The terms "infinitive" and "verb zero" both refer to forms of a verb, but they are not exactly the same. Infinitive: The infinitive is the base form of a verb, often preceded by the word "to." For example, in "to run," "run" is the infinitive form. Infinitives can be either: Bare infinitive: The base form of the verb without "to" (e.g., "run" in "I can run"). Full infinitive: The base form with "to" (e.g., "to run" in "I want to run"). Verb Zero (Base Form): The term "verb zero" typically refers to the bare infinitive or the base form of the verb, which is used without "to." For example, in sentences like "She can swim" or "They must go," "swim" and "go" are in the verb zero form. Summary Infinitive: Can be either "to + verb" (full infinitive) or just the base form (bare infinitive). Verb Zero: Refers specifically to the base form of the verb, without "to" (bare infinitive). So, while the bare infinitive and verb zero refer to the same form, the term infinitive can also include the "to + verb" form.