The breakout sessions gave employees a chance to express ideas and learn of opporunities within the Center.
Is an infinitive "to" needed in front of "learn of?"
Thanks.
BMO
No; it's optional.![]()
Thanks. I always wonder about that. BMO
Exactly what tdol nicely provided, plus this:Originally Posted by bmo
'a chance to X' (OK)
a chance to [express and learn]
([...] = one phrase)
'a chance to X' and 'a time to X' (OK)
[a chance to express] and [time to learn]
([...] = two separate phrases)
'a chance to X and to Y' (OK)
a chance [[to express] and [to learn]]
([...] = two separate phrases within one phrase)
This kind of structure is symmetrical.
All the best,
All the best,
Thanks.
A chance to express and learn ideas. (OK? One object)
A chance to express ideas and learn of opportunities. (OK? Two objects.)
A chance to express ideas and to learn of opportunities (OK? Two objects.)
BMO
The first one does not work. We learn about ideas; we don't learn ideas. Possibly, you could say:Originally Posted by bmo
- a chance to learn about ideas and to learn how to talk about those ideas
The other two are fine. As Tdol noted, the to is optional there. The two phrases really mean the same thing.
:)