Want this question answered?
predicate nominative
predicate nominative
predicate nominative
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
"to finish your test" is the infinitive phrase.
predicate nominative
predicate nominative
predicate nominative
"To become famous" is an infinitive phrase. It could serve as a noun, adjective, or adverb, but there is no adverb in it.
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
The infinitive phrase is "to join the circus" (an adverbial phrase).
"to finish your test" is the infinitive phrase.
Yes, the phrase "to become" is an infinitive phrase. An infinitive phrase consists of the word "to" followed by a verb in its base form, and it functions as a noun, adjective, or adverb in a sentence.
Georgio is planning to become an airplane pilot. The complete infinitive phrase is "to become an airplane pilot".
Lisa wants to go quickly.
An infinitive phrase will start with the base form of a verb (e.g., to eat, to run) and function as a noun, adjective, or adverb. A prepositional phrase will begin with a preposition (e.g., in, on, at) followed by a noun or pronoun, and it functions as an adjective or adverb to describe a noun or verb.
"You" is the subject. What did you do? you met. "Met" is the verb. "at the park" is a prepositional phrase (where did you meet?). You met to do what? You met to run. So "to run" becomes the direct object of the sentence.