direct object
to buy a car
direct object
Lisa wants to go quickly.
"Quien quiere?" means who wants. If you add a verb in the infinitive form (such as comer) to the end of the phrase, it become "who wants to eat?"
No. An infinitive is to + base form of a verb that can be used as a noun.Example: To sleep is all she wants when she is sick.A gerund is a verb ending in -ing that is used as a noun.Example: Swimming is her favorite sport.
An infinitive is to + simple form of a verb. It often acts as a noun, adjective, or adverb. Because of this, an infinitive is never the main verb in a sentence.The dog has been locked in the house all day. She wants to run in the yard.
A grammatical construction in which an adverb is placed to and the verb stem
Yes, the sentence "he wants to pee" is grammatically correct.
because he wants to be a goosee
Wants would be the verb in that sentence.
Yes, it does. The subject pronoun is the subject of a sentence or a clause. Both a sentence or a clause must have a verb.Examples:He wants a new jacket. (the subject of the sentence is 'he', the verb is 'wants')The one he wants has his team's logo. (the subject of the clause is 'he', the verb is 'wants'; the subject of the sentence is 'one', the verb is 'has')I saw the jacket he wants at Mike's. (the relative clause 'he wants' relates to the direct object of the sentence 'jacket')
Nothing is wrong the sentence is good