Here I want to know the differences between the following tenses that are used after the preposition to and the normal tenses that we know.
The game plays to be won on Thursday. (What make difference in meaning if a sentence is written in Simple Past verb to verb pattern and Passive Voice of Present Simple)
The animal needs to be dominating next Saturday. (What make difference in meaning with a sentence written in Present Continuous and Passive Voice of Present Continuous.)
I hope to have finished by noon. (What make difference in meaning with a sentence written in the Present Perfect before the preposition to?)
Your last example sentence is a good sentence, but the meanings of your questions are unclear.
If you want to know the difference in meaning between two sentences, it would be better to give two correct sentences as examples. We'd have a better chance of answering such a question.
I'm really sorry if you have some misunderstanding about it. Let me explain better about what I really want to know.
Actually I've found a topic through the Internet about different pattern that verbs acquire. These also involve the infinitive tenses form.
Example:
Pefect Infinitive.
I hope to have finished by noon. (In this sentence the present perfect form is localated after to, like an infinitive verb but in Present Perfect). My question is when do I use this verb pattern? I don't know if I can call this as Perfect Infinitive.
and the Other question is What make difference in meaning this verb pattern with the Present Perfect used normally. Ex. I have hoped to finish by noon.
The present perfect means something began to happen in the past, but when the present arrives you have done it.
and What the present perfect infinitive means?
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Same question with the others infinitive verb form.
to be + past participle.
to be + continious verb.
1. I hope to finish by noon - I hope that I will finish by noon.
2. I hope to have finished by noon - I hope that I will have finished by noon.
With this particular pair, there is no significant difference in meaning bewteen #1 and #2.
Context is always important; labelling is rarely important.
"I have hoped to finish by noon" is not a good sentence.
A: I hope to have finished by noon
B: I have hoped to finish by noon.
You're making a logical error. You want to know what A means, so you've looked around for something that looks superficially like it and called it B (and it happens not to be a good English sentence). Then you've asked "What is the difference between A and B".
It would have been far easier simply to ask, "What does A mean?"
A means, "I hope I will have finished by noon".
B, if someone ever said it, would mean "There has been a time when I hoped to have finished by noon".
So, you're no better off. A and B mean two different things, and it's futile to try and specify a "difference". Like most "What's the difference" questions, it's far better to understand what each sentence means, and forget the whole concept of the difference between them.
In other words, instead of worrying about the difference between an elephant and an eggplant, find out what each of these things are, and once you know that, you can forget about making a comparison between them.