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Grammar Videos 59 videos

Your vs. You're
4158 Views

Want even more deets on Your vs. You're? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Affect vs. Effect
10818 Views

This video explains the difference between affect and effect and provide tips for remembering which is which and when to use each one. If you suffe...

Its vs. It's
5830 Views

What’s the difference between its and it’s (spoiler alert: it’s more than just an apostrophe). This video covers the use of both of these wor...

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Into vs. In To 1422 Views


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Want even more deets on Into vs. In To? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Into versus In to, a la Shmoop. Okay, Shmoopers, it's time to discover the

00:11

ins and outs of “into” and “in to”.

00:14

Hold onto your seat… we're gonna have a lot of examples for this one…

00:18

“Into” is a preposition. It connects a noun or pronoun to the rest of a sentence...

00:23

...and is generally related to direction.

00:25

“In to”...

00:28

…with a space between the “in” and “to”...

00:31

...can be together in a sentence accidentally.

00:33

Or, the “in” could be serving as an adverb, preposition, or adjective in the sentence.

00:39

Or, the “to” could be a preposition or an adverb within the sentence. See why we

00:44

need examples? Let's start with “into”, as in the directional

00:48

“into”.

00:49

A bird flew into Bob while he was riding his bike...

00:53

...causing Bob to veer into a bush.

00:59

Julie dropped Jane's favorite book into a puddle...

01:03

...and Jane drove her fist into Julie's face. Now, let's look at “in to”...

01:10

...the “in to” with a space between the “in” and the “to”.

01:15

The thieves broke in to the car. “Broke in” is a phrasal verb, so there is a space

01:25

between “in” and “to”. He went in to buy milk. Here, the word “to”

01:30

is part of the infinitive phrase “to buy”. Here's how to remember when to use “into”...

01:38

...the directional, prepositional “into”.

01:40

“Into” serves as an arrow in a sentence...

01:43

...as in, “Jane went into the kitchen”...

01:45

...and “Tommy dove into the pool”. The best thing you can do with the “into”

01:50

and “in to” grammar rule is to practice...

01:53

...and practice...

01:54

...and practice some more. It'll be about as fun as toting a sousaphone around a football

01:57

field on a really hot day...

01:59

...but at least you'll wow your English teacher next time you turn in a paper.

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