To-infinitive – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A2 » To-infinitives – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Exercises:   123456789101112

You are at a cafe/restaurant with your friends. Read the sentences carefully and choose the best option (A, B, or C) to complete each conversation.

 “Good morning. I would like ______ a cup of coffee, please.”

     (A) ordering

     (B) to order

     (C) order

 “Excuse me, we need ______ the menu, please.”

     (A) to see

     (B) see

     (C) seeing

 “This cake looks big. Do you want ______ a dessert with me?”

     (A) share

     (B) sharing

     (C) to share

4   “My sister is very thirsty. She wants ______ some orange juice.”

     (A) to drink

     (B) drinks

     (C) drinking

 “We have finished our meal. I would like ______ the bill now.”

     (A) paying

     (B) pay

     (C) to pay

 “I looked at the menu for a long time and decided ______ the chocolate cake.”

     (A) have

     (B) to have

     (C) having

 “The restaurant is very busy, but we hope ______ a table near the window.”

     (A) to get

     (B) getting

     (C) got

8   “Can you help me? I need ______ these drinks to our table.”

     (A) carrying

     (B) to carry

     (C) carried

9   “When you go to the counter, please don’t forget ______ some extra napkins.”

     (A) bring

     (B) bringing

     (C) to bring

10   “The waiter was very nice and offered ______ the table for us.”

     (A) to clean

     (B) cleaning

     (C) cleans

11   “Put your wallet away! My friend promised ______ for the lunch today.”

     (A) pays

     (B) to pay

     (C) paying

12   “I don’t like sweet drinks, so I want ______ a large bottle of mineral water.”

     (A) to order

     (B) order

     (C) ordering

13   “The food was great. Now we need ______ the waiter for the check.”

     (A) asking

     (B) ask

     (C) to ask

14   “Did you remember ______ the vegetarian pizza for Sarah? She doesn’t eat meat.”

     (A) to order

     (B) ordering

     (C) ordered

15   “We are ready to order. Would you like me ______ the waiter?”

     (A) calling

     (B) to call

     (C) call

16   “Everything looks so delicious. I don’t know what ______ for the main course.”

     (A) choose

     (B) choosing

     (C) to choose

17   “Excuse me, is it possible ______ my order, please? I changed my mind.”

     (A) to change

     (B) change

     (C) changing

18   “This is the best restaurant in town. I want you ______ this soup; it’s amazing!”

     (A) trying

     (B) to try

     (C) try

19   “We don’t have enough money ______ the expensive steak, so let’s get burgers.”

     (A) bought

     (B) buying

     (C) to buy

20   “Be careful! The coffee is too hot ______ right now. Let’s wait a minute.”

     (A) drinking

     (B) drink

     (C) to drink

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (B) to order

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb phrase “would like” is always followed by a to-infinitive (to + verb) to express a polite request or desire.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “ordering” is a common mistake because learners confuse “would like” with the verb “like” (which can take an -ing form). Option (C) “order” is a basic error because two verbs cannot stand together without “to” or an -ing form.

2  (A) to see

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “need” expressing a necessity for an action that hasn’t happened yet takes a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “seeing” is a common mistake (gerund). Option (B) “see” is a structural error (bare infinitive).

3  (C) to share

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “want” is followed by a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “sharing” is a common mistake. Option (A) “share” is a basic grammar error (missing “to”).

4  (A) to drink

Explanation:Why it’s correct: “Wants” must be followed by “to + verb”.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “drinking” is a common mistake. Option (B) “drinks” is a basic error (adding an ‘s’ to the second verb is incorrect).

5  (C) to pay

Explanation:Why it’s correct: Polite requests with “would like” require a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “paying” is a common mistake. Option (B) “pay” is grammatically invalid here.

6  (B) to have

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “decide” (making a choice for a future action) is followed by a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “having” is a common mistake. Option (A) “have” is a basic structural error.

7  (A) to get

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “hope” (wishing for a future outcome) takes a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “getting” is a common mistake. Option (C) “got” is a tense error (using past tense after another verb).

8  (B) to carry

Explanation:Why it’s correct: “Need” + to-infinitive shows an action you must do.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “carrying” is a common mistake. Option (C) “carried” is grammatically incorrect (past participle).

9  (C) to bring

Explanation:Why it’s correct: “Forget to do something” means forgetting a task you are supposed to do in the future.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “bringing” is a common mistake; “forget + V-ing” means forgetting a memory of something you did in the past, which does not fit this context. Option (A) is missing “to”.

10  (A) to clean

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “offer” (volunteering to do something) is followed by a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “cleaning” is a common mistake. Option (C) “cleans” is a basic grammar error.

11  (B) to pay

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The verb “promise” (committing to a future action) takes a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “paying” is a common mistake. Option (A) “pays” is grammatically incorrect.

12  (A) to order

Explanation:Why it’s correct: Expressing a desire with “want” requires a to-infinitive.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “ordering” is a common mistake. Option (B) “order” is a basic error.

13  (C) to ask

Explanation:Why it’s correct: “Need” requires a to-infinitive to express a required future action.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “asking” is a common mistake. Option (B) “ask” is missing “to”.

14  (A) to order

Explanation:Why it’s correct: “Remember to do something” means remembering a task you needed to do.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “ordering” means having a memory of the past action of ordering, which does not fit the meaning of checking if a task was completed. Option (C) is a tense error.

15  (B) to call

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The structure is “would like + Object + to-infinitive” (asking if someone wants you to do something).

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “call” is a basic error (missing “to”). Option (A) “calling” is a common mistake.

16  (C) to choose

Explanation:Why it’s correct: We use a “Wh- word (what, where, how) + to-infinitive” to express indirect questions or uncertainty about an action.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “choosing” is grammatically incorrect after a Wh- word in this structure. Option (A) “choose” lacks “to”.

17  (A) to change

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The structure “It is + Adjective (possible) + to-infinitive” is used to ask about or describe an action.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (C) “changing” is a common mistake. Option (B) “change” is a basic error.

18  (B) to try

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The structure is “want + Object + to-infinitive” (expressing a desire for someone else to do an action).

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “trying” is a common mistake. Option (C) “try” is grammatically incorrect.

19  (C) to buy

Explanation:Why it’s correct: We use “enough + noun + to-infinitive” to show sufficiency for a purpose.

  • Why others are wrong: Option (B) “buying” is a common mistake. Option (A) “bought” is a tense error.

20  (C) to drink

Explanation:Why it’s correct: The structure “too + adjective + to-infinitive” means something is more than acceptable, making an action impossible (too hot to drink = so hot that we cannot drink it).

  • Why others are wrong: Option (A) “drinking” is a common mistake. Option (B) “drink” is missing “to”.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  1. Verbs of Desire and Necessity: Always use “to + Verb” (to-infinitive) after verbs that point to a future action or desire.
    • Common verbs: want, would like, need, hope, decide, promise, offer.
    • Example: “I want to order.” (NOT “I want ordering”).
  2. “Would like” vs. “Like”: – “I like drinking coffee” (General habit).
    • “I would like to drink coffee” (Polite request right now).
  3. Remember / Forget + To Verb:
    • Use this when talking about a task you must do.
    • Example: “Don’t forget to bring napkins.” (It is your task).
  4. Special Structures with To-Infinitive:
    • Verb + Object + to V: I want you to try this.
    • Wh-word + to V: I don’t know what to choose.
    • Adjective + to V: It is possible to change.
    • Too / Enough + to V: It is too hot to drink.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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