Personal Infinitive After Prepositions
Use the personal infinitive after prepositions to clearly identify who is performing an action in a sentence.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Infinitive verbs that change endings to match the subject.
- Primarily used after prepositions like para, sem, and até.
- Essential when the subject is different from the main verb.
- Formed by adding -es, -mos, or -em to the infinitive.
Quick Reference
| Subject Pronoun | Verb Ending | Example (Verb: Falar) | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eu / Você / Ele | (None) | Para eu falar | For me to speak |
| Tu | -es | Para tu falares | For you to speak |
| Nós | -mos | Para nós falarmos | For us to speak |
| Vocês / Eles | -em | Para eles falarem | For them to speak |
| Vós | -des | Para vós falardes | For you (pl) to speak |
关键例句
3 / 9Comprei pão para nós comermos.
I bought bread for us to eat.
Saímos sem vocês perceberem.
We left without you noticing.
É importante tu fazeres o teu melhor.
It is important that you do your best.
The Stem Never Changes
Don't overthink irregular verbs! Unlike other tenses, the stem stays exactly like the infinitive. For 'fazer', it is 'fazermos', not 'fizermos'.
Don't Confuse with Future Subjunctive
They look identical for regular verbs, but use the personal infinitive after prepositions like 'para' and 'sem'. Use the subjunctive after 'se' or 'quando'.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Infinitive verbs that change endings to match the subject.
- Primarily used after prepositions like para, sem, and até.
- Essential when the subject is different from the main verb.
- Formed by adding -es, -mos, or -em to the infinitive.
Overview
Welcome to one of the most unique features of the Portuguese language. You might think verbs are either conjugated or left alone. In most languages, the infinitive is the "lazy" form. It just sits there in the dictionary. Portuguese disagrees. We have something called the infinitivo pessoal or the personal infinitive. This means our infinitives can change their clothes to match the person doing the action. It is a bit like a grammar superpower. It allows you to be incredibly precise without using complex sentence structures. If you have ever felt that a sentence needed a subject but the verb refused to cooperate, this is your solution. Yes, even native speakers get a little tangled up here sometimes. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. It tells everyone exactly who is moving and when.
How This Grammar Works
Imagine you want to say "for us to eat." In English, the word "eat" does not change. In Spanish or French, it stays as the impersonal infinitive too. But in Portuguese, we attach a little tail to the verb. This tail tells us that "we" are the ones doing the eating. This pattern is most common after prepositions. Prepositions are small but mighty words like para, sem, por, or até. When one of these words shows up, it often triggers the personal infinitive. You use it when the verb has a specific subject. It helps avoid confusion. If you just say the basic infinitive, people might not know who you are talking about. Adding the personal ending clears the air immediately. It is efficient and elegant.
Formation Pattern
- 1Building the personal infinitive is surprisingly easy. You do not need to memorize a whole new set of irregular stems. You just take the standard infinitive and add specific endings. Here is the step-by-step process:
- 2Start with the dictionary form of the verb (e.g.,
falar,comer,partir). - 3For
eu,você,ele, andela, you add nothing. The verb stays the same. - 4For
tu, you add-esto the end. Sofalarbecomesfalares. - 5For
nós, you add-mos. Socomerbecomescomermos. - 6For
vós(rare but good for your ego), you add-des. Sopartirbecomespartirdes. - 7For
vocês,eles, andelas, you add-em. Sofalarbecomesfalarem. - 8Notice how the stem never changes. Even irregular verbs like
serorirfollow this rule.Serbecomessermosfornós. It is very predictable.
When To Use It
This is the most important part. You use this pattern when the subject of the infinitive is different from the main subject. Or, you use it when you simply want to emphasize who is doing what. Let’s look at some real-world scenarios.
Scenario 1: Ordering food. You might say, "Eu trouxe este vinho para nós bebermos" (I brought this wine for us to drink). Here, nós is the subject of the drinking.
Scenario 2: At a job interview. You could say, "Obrigado por vocês me receberem" (Thank you for receiving me).
Scenario 3: Travel and directions. "É melhor esperarmos até eles chegarem" (It is better we wait until they arrive).
Common prepositions that love this pattern include:
para(for/to)sem(without)por(for/because of)até(until)antes de(before)depois de(after)ao(upon/when)
When Not To Use It
You do not always need the personal infinitive. If the person doing the action is the same as the main verb, it is usually redundant. For example, "Eu quero comer" (I want to eat). You do not need to say "Eu quero eu comer." That would sound like you are malfunctioning. However, even in these cases, you *can* use it for extra emphasis. But generally, if the subject is obvious and shared, stick to the simple infinitive. It is faster and sounds more natural. Using it too much when it is not needed can make you sound a bit like a legal document. Nobody wants to sound like a tax return at a party.
Common Mistakes
The biggest trap is the nós form. Many people forget to add the -mos. They just say para nós falar. This sounds very "Tarzan" to a native speaker. Another common slip-up is confusing it with the future subjunctive. They look identical for regular verbs. But their jobs are totally different. The personal infinitive happens after prepositions. The future subjunctive happens after words like quando or se. Also, watch out for the eles form. Make sure you add that -em. If you say para eles fala, it sounds like a singular subject with a plural pronoun. It is like wearing one shoe. It just feels wrong.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
How does this differ from the normal infinitive? The normal (impersonal) infinitive is for general statements. "Fumar é mau" (Smoking is bad). No specific person is smoking there. But "Para vocês fumarem, têm de ir lá fora" (For you to smoke, you must go outside) targets a group.
Compare it to the future subjunctive too. You use the future subjunctive for "if" or "when" scenarios: "Se eles chegarem cedo..." (If they arrive early). You use the personal infinitive for facts or results after prepositions: "Apesar de eles chegarem cedo..." (Despite them arriving early). One is about possibility; the other is about context or cause. Think of the personal infinitive as the more grounded, factual cousin.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is it used in Brazil and Portugal?
A. Yes, absolutely! It is essential in both dialects.
Q. Can I just use the normal infinitive instead?
A. Sometimes, but you risk being misunderstood or sounding uneducated.
Q. Does Spanish have this?
A. No, and they are very jealous of us for it.
Q. Is it used in informal speech?
A. Yes, all the time. It makes sentences flow much better.
Q. What if the verb is irregular?
A. It doesn't matter. Take the whole infinitive and add the ending. Ir becomes irmos. Simple!
Reference Table
| Subject Pronoun | Verb Ending | Example (Verb: Falar) | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eu / Você / Ele | (None) | Para eu falar | For me to speak |
| Tu | -es | Para tu falares | For you to speak |
| Nós | -mos | Para nós falarmos | For us to speak |
| Vocês / Eles | -em | Para eles falarem | For them to speak |
| Vós | -des | Para vós falardes | For you (pl) to speak |
The Stem Never Changes
Don't overthink irregular verbs! Unlike other tenses, the stem stays exactly like the infinitive. For 'fazer', it is 'fazermos', not 'fizermos'.
Don't Confuse with Future Subjunctive
They look identical for regular verbs, but use the personal infinitive after prepositions like 'para' and 'sem'. Use the subjunctive after 'se' or 'quando'.
Embrace the 'Nós'
Adding '-mos' to an infinitive is the quickest way to sound like a local. It makes your sentences sound much more sophisticated than using simple phrases.
Spanish vs Portuguese
If you speak Spanish, you'll be tempted to use 'que' + a conjugated verb. In Portuguese, we prefer the personal infinitive because it's shorter and more elegant.
例句
9Comprei pão para nós comermos.
Focus: comermos
I bought bread for us to eat.
The ending -mos is added to 'comer' because 'nós' is the subject.
Saímos sem vocês perceberem.
Focus: perceberem
We left without you noticing.
The preposition 'sem' triggers the personal infinitive for the subject 'vocês'.
É importante tu fazeres o teu melhor.
Focus: fazeres
It is important that you do your best.
Even without a preposition, phrases like 'é importante' can trigger this form.
Vou esperar até eles serem honestos.
Focus: serem
I will wait until they are honest.
Even 'ser' is regular in the personal infinitive: just add -em.
Antes de vós sairdes, verifiquem a porta.
Focus: sairdes
Before you (plural/formal) leave, check the door.
The -des ending is very formal or regional, but correct.
✗ para eles comer → ✓ para eles comerem
Focus: comerem
For them to eat.
Never forget the -em for plural subjects.
✗ para nós falar → ✓ para nós falarmos
Focus: falarmos
For us to speak.
Adding -mos makes the sentence grammatically complete.
Ao entrarmos na sala, todos aplaudiram.
Focus: entrarmos
Upon us entering the room, everyone cheered.
'Ao' + personal infinitive creates a temporal 'when' clause.
Não é por eu ter dinheiro que sou feliz.
Focus: ter
It's not because I have money that I am happy.
Used here with 'por' to clarify the subject 'eu'.
自我测试
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'chegar' (to arrive).
Vou preparar o jantar para eles ___ a tempo.
Since the subject is 'eles', we must add the -em ending to the infinitive.
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'estudar' (to study).
Não podes sair sem tu ___ primeiro.
With the subject 'tu', the personal infinitive requires the -es ending.
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'ir' (to go).
É melhor nós ___ agora.
For the subject 'nós', add -mos to the infinitive 'ir'.
🎉 得分: /3
视觉学习工具
Infinitive vs. Personal Infinitive
To Conjugate or Not?
Is there a specific subject for the verb?
Is the subject different from the main verb?
Is the subject plural or 'tu'?
The 'Big 4' Endings
Singular (Eu/Você)
- • No ending
- • Ex: Falar
Informal (Tu)
- • Add -es
- • Ex: Falares
Plural (Nós)
- • Add -mos
- • Ex: Falarmos
Group (Eles/Vocês)
- • Add -em
- • Ex: Falarem
常见问题
21 个问题It is a form of the infinitive verb that changes its ending to agree with a specific subject. For example, falar becomes falarmos when referring to nós (us).
It's a historical evolution from Latin that allowed Portuguese to keep the infinitive flexible. It makes the language more concise by avoiding lengthy que clauses.
Not really! Since the endings are added directly to the dictionary form of the verb, there are almost no irregulars to worry about.
No, Spanish uses the subjunctive or the impersonal infinitive. This is a special 'Portuguese-only' feature that gives the language its unique rhythm.
If you use nós, use the personal infinitive like para nós comermos. If you use a gente, keep it as para a gente comer.
Yes, it is very common in Portugal. You add -es to the verb, as in para tu falares.
Context is key. Use the personal infinitive after prepositions like sem or para, and the future subjunctive after conjunctions like quando or se.
They act like regular verbs in this tense! Ser becomes sermos, seres, or serem.
Usually, after the personal infinitive with a hyphen, like para sentarem-se. In Brazil, you might hear it before: para se sentarem.
Use it to express 'when' or 'upon'. For example, ao chegarmos means 'when we arrived' or 'upon arriving'.
Yes, it often expresses a reason. Por eles serem ricos means 'Because they are rich' or 'Due to them being rich'.
Yes, it's very common. Antes de tu saíres means 'Before you leave'.
Same rule! Depois de eles jantarem means 'After they have dinner'.
It is used heavily in both. You'll hear it in casual conversation and see it in every book or newspaper.
Brazilians use it frequently, though they might simplify some plurals in very casual speech. However, in any standard context, it is expected.
Not if you want to sound natural. At B2, using the personal infinitive is a key marker of your fluency and control over the language.
The preposition para is definitely the most frequent trigger for the personal infinitive.
Rarely. Usually, it follows a main clause or a prepositional phrase that sets the context.
You use para eles verem. You take ver and add -em.
You use para nós irmos. Take ir and add -mos.
Try rewriting sentences that use que + a conjugated verb into sentences with a preposition + personal infinitive. It's great exercise!
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