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Your vs. You're
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They as Singular Pronoun––Is It Okay?
767 Views

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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...

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Split Infinitives - Are They Okay? 551 Views


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Want even more deets on Split Infinitives? Click here to review. Or check out our entire grammar section for all the goods.

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Transcript

00:04

Are split infinitives okay?, a la Shmoop. You're on a road trip to Phoenix, and end

00:11

up spending the night at the Bates Motel.

00:14

When Norman busts in with his knife, do you opt to bravely fight back with your towel

00:19

whip... ...your shaving cream...

00:21

...or your ability to cunningly split every infinitive in sight?

00:28

Let's start with what an infinitive is. There are two kinds. Bare infinitives are the one-word

00:34

verbs you use every day...

00:36

...like “shower”, “shave”, and “kill”.

00:40

Full infinitives carry a “to” in front of the verb, so you end up with “to shower”,

00:45

“to shave”, and “to kill”.

00:48

Splitting an infinitive, then, is what happens when you add a word between “to” and the

00:53

bare verb attached to it. Grammarians of the nineteenth century would

00:56

have destroyed anyone they caught splitting infinitives.

00:59

However, those guys are now ghosts... ...and pretty much everyone today agrees that

01:04

splitting infinitives is kosher. Let's look at a couple of examples. You could

01:09

say, “Norman worked to carefully conceal Marion's body”...

01:13

...meaning Norman hid the girl's corpse where no one was ever going to find it.

01:18

But what if you didn't split the infinitive in this example?

01:22

What if you said instead, “Norman worked carefully to conceal Marion's body”?

01:27

The sentence would have a completely different meaning. “Carefully” would be referring

01:31

to how Norman worked...

01:33

...rather than to how he concealed. Okay, another example. You could say, “Norman

01:38

decided to artfully dress as his dead mother.”

01:42

If you don't split the infinitive...

01:44

...and say instead that “Norman decided artfully to dress as his dead mother”...

01:48

...the result is a sentence that doesn't make sense.

01:52

There may come a day when you doubt the correctness of splitting infinitives. If so, just remember

01:56

this...

01:57

...the catch phrase for “Star Trek” is “to boldly go where no man has gone before.”

02:02

If Gene Roddenberry was allowed to split infinitives, then you get a pass, too.

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