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The use of 'que' before the infinitiveThis is the place for questions about conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax and other grammar questions for English or Spanish. |
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#1
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The use of 'que' before the infinitive
Good morning everyone,
I have a question about when to use (and when not to use) 'que' between a conjugated verb and an infinitive... What are the rules? Thanks, Matt |
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#2
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I can only think of two cases when this is used:
tener que + infinitive hay que + infinitive These both imply obligation. tener que + infinitive (have to (do something)) Tienes que ir. (You have to go.) hay que + infinitive (have to (do something), but used in an impersonal way) Hay que ir. (One has to (must) go.) |
#3
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Thanks Rusty - so it's only used as part of a necessity (?), such as:
"Necesito que llevar un abrigo porque hace frio afuera" "I need to wear a coat because it's cold outside"..? What about when to use 'a' between a conjugated and infinitive verb? For example, when you say "I'm going to go" or "I'm going to see", you use 'a' to act as the 'to': "Voy a ir" or "Voy a ver" But when you say something like "I would like to see a film", you omit the 'a': "Me gustaria ver una pelicula"... |
#4
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Quote:
One verb that use "que" is "tener" and there are the expressions "haber que" and "dado que" an invariable term that means "given that.." I don't think these will be a problem for you. As for the preposition "a" and all the rest, I suggest you go to this web page, it gives you a list of all the verbs that use prepositions before an infinitive and before an object. http://www.elearnspanishlanguage.com...swithprep.html
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Last edited by Luna Azul; April 23, 2011 at 01:54 PM. Reason: typo |
#5
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Only the two set phrases I listed above use a que in between, as far as I know.
Tengo que llevar I have to wear Hay que llevar One must wear Necesito llevar (no que) I need to wear The use of a preposition, whether it is 'a', 'en', 'con', 'de', or 'por', when an infinitive follows, largely depends on the verb used before the preposition. The verb ir isn't always followed by the preposition 'a'. When you're talking about a future event, as you did with your two examples, it is. |
#6
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Thanks both of you - the link to elearnspanishlanguage is especially useful!
Matt |
Tags |
hay que, infinitive, infinitivo, que, que + infinitive, tener que |
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