English, asked by iana, 1 year ago

explain noun-infinite

Answers

Answered by hankeevai
1

An infinitive is to plus a verb form. It can be used as a noun. Examples: to be, to see, to be seen, to be eaten.The noun infinitive can be a subject  a direct object ; a predicate nominative; an appositive; an object of a preposition 

 noun infinitives can have with them direct objects, predicate nominatives, predicate adjectives or modifiers to form what is called a infinitive phrase. Example: To eat solid foods is hard for babies. "To eat" is the noun infinitive used as the subject of the verb is, and it has its own direct object "foods" with the adjective "solid," which together make up the infinitive phrase "to eat solid foods" serving as the subject of the sentence.

Noun infinitives may be compound. Example: I want to eat and to sleep. Sometimes the second to is left off. 


hankeevai: Ya u are right
hankeevai: Anything else
iana: no thank you
hankeevai: Your welcome
iana: bye
hankeevai: If anything I am there ask me
hankeevai: Bye
iana: no nothing
hankeevai: Ok then bye
iana: bye
Answered by ankushrathour2004
2

Explanation:

having no limits or boundaries in time, space, extent, or magnitude. (as noun; preceded by the)the infinite.

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