🎧 Loving Life: Jim's Story
You Can Read Jim’s Story Here:
📖 Jim’s New Life in Spain (B1/B2)
Grammar Investigation
Answer each question to reveal the grammar explanation:
Jim had always imagined living near the sea.
In the sentence ‘Jim had always imagined living near the sea’, why do we use the -ing form after ‘imagine’?
He gave up working in the corporate world.
Why do we say ‘gave up working’ and NOT ‘gave up to work’?
Swimming in the sea has become his favorite morning activity.
In ‘Swimming in the sea has become his favorite morning activity’, what does the gerund ‘Swimming’ do?
He wanted to find a place where he could be happy to wake up every morning.
Why do we use ‘to wake up’ after the adjective ‘happy’ in this sentence?
One day, he decided to make a big change.
Why does the story say ‘he decided to make a big change’ and NOT ‘he decided making a big change’?
Then he works for a few hours to earn money.
In ‘he works for a few hours to earn money’, what does ‘to earn money’ tell us?
📚 Grammar Reference
CLUSTER 1: Verbs which always take a gerund (imagine/miss/risk)
Structure: verb + gerund (-ing form)
Pattern: subject + verb (imagine/miss/risk) + verb-ing
Key verbs: imagine, miss, risk
What it expresses: These verbs describe mental states (imagine), emotional experiences (miss), or actions with consequences (risk) and always require the gerund form
When to use: After verbs imagine, miss, and risk in any tense or form (affirmative, negative, questions)
Why this form: These verbs grammatically require gerunds; the gerund represents the activity or state being imagined, missed, or risked
Examples in story: 7
CLUSTER 2: Gerunds after prepositions
Structure: preposition + gerund (-ing form)
Pattern: verb/noun/adjective + preposition + verb-ing
What it expresses: Prepositions in English are always followed by gerunds (not infinitives) when a verb follows
When to use: After any preposition (about, of, from, by, without, before, after, etc.) when you need to add a verb
Why this form: This is a fixed grammatical rule in English: preposition + noun form of verb (gerund)
Examples in story: 8
CLUSTER 3: Gerunds as subjects
Structure: gerund + verb (as sentence subject)
Pattern: verb-ing (+ object/complement) + verb + rest of sentence
What it expresses: Presents an activity or state as the main topic/subject of the sentence
When to use: When you want to talk about an activity in general terms as the subject of a sentence
Why this form: Gerunds function as nouns and can be subjects; this makes the sentence focus on the activity itself
Examples in story: 7
CLUSTER 4: Infinitive after adjectives
Structure: adjective + to + infinitive
Pattern: subject + be + adjective + to + base verb
What it expresses: Describes emotional reactions, difficulty levels, or states related to performing an action
When to use: After adjectives that describe feelings (happy, proud, delighted) or qualities (difficult, hard, easy, free)
Why this form: These adjectives require infinitives to show the action or situation being described
Examples in story: 7
CLUSTER 5: Verbs which always take infinitive (decide/want/plan/hope/learn)
Structure: verb + to + infinitive
Pattern: subject + verb (decide/want/plan/hope/learn) + to + base verb
Key verbs: decide, want, plan, hope, learn, choose, need, agree, refuse, promise
What it expresses: These verbs express intentions, desires, plans, or obligations that point toward future actions
When to use: After verbs that express decision-making (decide, choose), desires (want, hope), plans (plan, intend), or necessity (need, have to)
Why this form: These verbs grammatically require infinitives; the infinitive represents the intended or desired action
Examples in story: 8
CLUSTER 6: Infinitive of purpose
Structure: to + infinitive (expressing purpose/reason)
Pattern: main clause + to + base verb (showing why/purpose)
What it expresses: Expresses the purpose, reason, or goal of an action (why someone does something)
When to use: To explain the reason for doing the main action; answers ‘Why?’ or ‘What for?’
Why this form: Infinitive of purpose is the most natural way to express reason/purpose in English
Examples in story: 5
Try the Quiz
Which sentence uses a gerund correctly after the verb “love”?
Complete the sentence: “I miss ___ time with my family.”
Which sentence correctly uses a gerund after a preposition?
What is the error in this sentence: “He’s good at to play tennis”?
Which sentence uses a gerund as the subject correctly?
Complete the sentence: “___ early is important for your health.”
Which sentence correctly uses an infinitive after “want”?
Complete the sentence: “They decided ___ a new house.”
What is wrong with this sentence: “She chose studying abroad”?
Which sentence correctly uses an infinitive after an adjective?
Complete the sentence: “This book is easy ___.”
In this sentence, what does the infinitive express: “I went to the store to buy milk”?
Which sentence correctly uses an infinitive of purpose?
What is the error in this sentence: “You risk to lose everything if you’re not careful”?
Complete the sentence: “Can you imagine ___ in a different country?”