I have no intention to be/of being kicked out of my own home.

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Apr 19, 2023
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Latvian, Lettish
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I have no intention to be/of being kicked out of my own home.

Can both "to be" and "of being" be used in this sentence?
 
Interesting. It would be useful to explain why. Could you comment on the reason, please?
 
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It's a pattern. "intention" in such sentences* is usually followed by "of" +"-ing". It is not followed by "to" + infinitive.
I have no intention of giving up.✅
I have no intention to give up.
❌
We had every intention of leaving.
✅
We have every intention to leave
. ❌

* Note that in other sentences, "intention" can be followed by "to" + infinitive. For example, "His intention was to broker peace". However, note the pattern difference.
 
However, note the pattern difference.
Thank you very much.
However, I don't see any difference or any difference in the pattern and the meaning, I don't see any reason actually. Do you mean if I use the words I/you/ he/she etc. / have/has the intention the . . . -ing form has to follow?
 
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Thank you.
I think the same is true of the expression with the intention, right?

Business bids are made with the intention of trying to win a contract -
is this a possible example?
 
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Yes, but "business bids" is not very natural. Try perhaps "In business, bids are made ...etc".
Otherwise, the sentence works.
 
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