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1 Post By Raymott
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Really need your help
Dear all
I often meet this kind of sentence "If it is to operate....."
Can you explain me the role of "is to"?
I guess it is for emphasis, but Im not sure
Thank you^^
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Re: Really need your help
Experts, please reply!
I am also eager to know what this grammtically means...
As far as I understand, it is a statement\fact. (simple present tense)
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Re: Really need your help

Originally Posted by
vihotruki
Dear all
I often meet this kind of sentence "If it is to operate....."
Can you explain me the role of "is to"?
I guess it is for emphasis, but Im not sure
Thank you^^
You can insert a mental "going".
"If it is going to operate, you'll need to insert a battery."
You can also say:
"To make it operate, ..."
"To get it to operate, ..."
"For it to operate, ..."
"In order for it to operate, ..."
...
I don't think it's for emphasis. If it is, what is the base form?
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Re: Really need your help
Thank Raymott, It sounds plausible. I think now I know how to use this in a right way.
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