Rather vs prefer
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alx
November 14, 2010, 08:59 PM
Hi everybody,
I've been wondering if there's any difference between "would rather" and "would prefer", do you use them interchangeably?
Additionally, a few days back, a workmate wrote something like "I'd rather prefer...", at first, I thought he was wrong but he keeps using that structure and I'm doubtful now since he speaks English natively.
Do you think it's a common structure?
I look forward to hearing your views.
Thanks. :)
Rusty
November 14, 2010, 09:46 PM
The usage of 'would rather' is idiomatic. It means the same thing as 'would prefer'. Both can used interchangeably, but a bare infinitive follows 'would rather', while a noun, gerund, or a noun clause follows 'would prefer'.
I would prefer going to the movies.
I would rather go to the movies.
I would prefer the red one.
I would prefer having|buying|getting the red one.
I would rather have|buy|get the red one.
I would rather not go.
I would prefer not going.
Instead of "I'd rather prefer," I'd rather use one of the two forms above. "I'd rather prefer" is used, but I wouldn't use it.
ChilenoAlemanCanada
November 14, 2010, 09:47 PM
I would never use that sentence structure, it just sounds weird. I'd rather and to prefer are used separately. They both mean the same thing.
alx
November 14, 2010, 10:04 PM
Thank you both, I knew something wasn't right with that phrase. :)
@Rusty, thanks for those examples, they're very useful.
Perikles
November 15, 2010, 03:16 AM
Additionally, a few days back, a workmate wrote something like "I'd rather prefer...", at first, I thought he was wrong If he really did say that, then he was wrong. You can use either rather or prefer, but not both.
Awaken
November 15, 2010, 06:30 AM
As Rusty said, "I'd rather" is an idiomatic way of saying you prefer one thing over the other.
So, indirectly what you are really saying is:
Generic Use:
I would rather do ABC than do XYZ.
I would rather go to the movies (than stay at home). People just leave out the "than" phrase for speed.
In these cases, rather and prefer mean the same in everyday use like Rusty pointed out.
alx
November 15, 2010, 12:53 PM
Thanks Perikles and Awaken, now it's clear.
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