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split an infinitiveの例文

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  • In some cases it may be preferable to split an infinitive.
  • They might split an infinitive because you taught them how.
  • Well, faster than you can split an infinitive, NHL GMs are getting the gate.
  • I would like someone to explain to me why it's regarded so terribly to split an infinitive.
  • By schoolmarms he means the rule-enforcers who tell students it's an offense to ever split an infinitive.
  • He says it's now standard usage to put a preposition at the end of a sentence and to occasionally split an infinitive.
  • He seemed to become impatient, however, as I asked if he thought it was ever justifiable to split an infinitive in a sentence that ended with a preposition.
  • The creature walking among us, if you haven't already guessed, is the old " rule " of grammar that says we shouldn't split an infinitive.
  • Grammarians have argued until they were blue in the face that you can't really split an infinitive, since " to " isn't part of the infinitive.
  • You may know it's OK to split an infinitive, but if your boss _ or your customer _ is less enlightened, you'll lose points for it anyway, she notes.
  • :: : : : : : Oh, it is easy to casually split an infinitive in English; perhaps if we were writing Latin there would be more to wonder at : P You create rules, and following the rules can analyse the data.
  • :: " In the 19th century, some grammatical authorities sought to introduce a prescriptive rule from Latin that split infinitives should not be used in English . " Um . . . how " can " you split an infinitive in a Latinate language?
  • I will be the first to admit that I regularly misuse Mr . Spell Check in the cavalier manner of somebody who hasn't touched a typewriter with serious intent since 1989 . And yes, I have been known to willfully split an infinitive with a resounding whack.
  • In " The Physics of Star Trek ", Lawrence M . Krauss begins a list of " Star Trek's " ten worst errors by quoting one of his colleagues who considers that their greatest mistake is " to split an infinitive every damn time ".
  • The kind of person who wouldn't put a predicate pronoun in the objective case ( " it's me " ) if his life depended on it, who wouldn't split an infinitive or end a sentence with a preposition if you put a gun to her head.
  • The earliest prohibition of the usage was in 1762, when Robert Lowth argued that because a split infinitive was not permissible in Latin, it should not be permissible in English . ( It is worth noting that it is impossible to split an infinitive in Latin, since the Latin infinitive is a single word .)
  • By the way, would you convey my compliments to the purist who reads your proofs and tell him or her that I write in a sort of broken-down patois which is something like the way a Swiss-waiter talks, and that when I split an infinitive, God damn it, I split it so it will remain split, and when I interrupt the velvety smoothness of my more or less literate syntax with a few sudden words of barroom vernacular, this is done with the eyes wide open and the mind relaxed and attentive.
  • Because the prohibition has become so widely known, the " Columbia Guide " recommends that writers " follow the conservative path [ of avoiding split infinitives when they are not necessary ], especially when you're uncertain of your readers'expectations and sensitivities in this matter . " R . W . Burchfield's revision of Fowler's " Modern English Usage " goes farther ( quoting Burchfield's own 1981 book " The Spoken Word " ) : " Avoid splitting infinitives whenever possible, but do not suffer undue remorse if a split infinitive is unavoidable for the completion of a sentence already begun . " Still more strongly, the style guide of " The Economist " says, " Happy the man who has never been told that it is wrong to split an infinitive : the ban is pointless.