UNIT 58. Prefer and would
rather
A. Prefer to do and prefer
doing
You can use 'prefer to (do)'
or 'prefer ~ing' to say what you prefer in general:
* I don't like cities. I
prefer to live in the country. or I prefer living in the country.
Study the differences in
structure after prefer. We say:
I prefer something to
something else.
I prefer doing something to
doing something else.
but I prefer to do something
rather than (do) something else.
* I prefer this coat to the
coat you were wearing yesterday.
* I prefer driving to
travelling by train.
but * I prefer to drive rather
than travel by train.
* Ann prefers to live in the
country rather than (live) in a city.
B. Would prefer (I'd
prefer...)
We use 'would prefer' to say
what somebody wants in a particular situation (not in general):
* 'Would you prefer tea or
coffee?' 'Coffee, please.'
We say 'would prefer to do'
(not 'doing'):
* 'Shall we go by train?'
'Well, I'd prefer to go by car.' (not 'I'd prefer going')
* I'd prefer to stay at home
tonight rather than go to the cinema.
C. Would rather (I'd
rather...)
Would rather (do) = would
prefer (to do). After would rather we use the infinitive without to.
Compare:
* 'Shall we go by train?' 'I'd
prefer to go by car.'
* 'Shall we go by train?' 'I'd
rather go by car.' (not 'to go')
* 'Would you rather have tea
or coffee?' 'Coffee, please.'
The negative is 'I'd rather
not (do something)':
* I'm tired. I'd rather not go
out this evening, if you don't mind.
* 'Do you want to go out this
evening?' 'I'd rather not.'
Study the structure after
would rather:
I'd rather do something than
(do) something else.
* I'd rather stay at home
tonight than go to the cinema.
D. I'd rather you did
something
When you want somebody to do
something, you can say 'I'd rather you did something':
* 'Shall I stay here?' 'I'd
rather you came with us.'
* 'Shall I tell them the news?'
'No. I'd rather they didn't know.'
* Shall I tell them or would
you rather they didn't know?
In this structure we use the
past (came, did etc.), but the meaning is present or future, not past.
Compare:
* I'd rather cook the dinner
now.
but * I'd rather you cooked
the dinner now. (not 'I'd rather you cook')
The negative is 'I'd rather
you didn't ...':
* I'd rather you didn't tell
anyone what I said.
* 'Do you mind if I smoke?'
'I'd rather you didn't.'
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