graduate
"to graduate".
No. One or the other is correct. We use can plus the infinitive without to: I can do that. But we use ablewith the copula verb ( to be, for example) and the infinitive with to. I am able to do that.
The infinitive form of "am" is "to be," the infinitive form of "is" is "to be," and the infinitive form of "was" is "to be."
you are derives from the infinitive of to be. The infinitive that belongs to 'you are' is 'to be'.
Gerund. (as after most of the prepositions.)
You simply put it in a sentence.
Ad. (However, if you want to use 'to' as a verb, in an infinitive form (like "to love"), then it is already included in Latin infinitive forms.)
"To be" is the infinitive form of are.
The infinitive form of had and has is to have.
The word jogging is not simply an infinitive. An infinitive is [to + a verb]. To jog would be an infinitive.
The infinitive "to read" is a bare infinitive.
The infinitive form of "was" and "were" is "to be." The infinitive form of "are" is also "to be."