Grammar

Adjective + to ...

Using adjectives with to-infinitive: hard to understand, nice of you to help, glad to hear, bound to happen

Adjective + to … with a Shifted Subject

You can describe something using it + adjective + to …:

It’s hard to read his handwriting.

But you can also move the object to the front and make it the subject:

His handwriting is hard to read.

Both sentences mean the same thing. Notice that when the object becomes the subject, you drop the pronoun at the end:

it + adjective + to …subject + adjective + to …
It’s expensive to maintain a fleet of company cars.Company cars are expensive to maintain. (not to maintain them)
It was impossible to meet the deadline.The deadline was impossible to meet. (not to meet it)
It’s easy to talk to the new manager.The new manager is easy to talk to. (not to talk to her)

This works with many adjectives: easy, difficult, hard, impossible, dangerous, safe, cheap, expensive, nice, interesting, exciting.

You can also use this pattern with adjective + noun:

  • That was a difficult question to answer. (not to answer it)
  • This is a great place to work. (not to work in it)

nice of (someone) to …

To comment on someone’s behaviour, use it + adjective + of + person + to …:

  • It was nice of the team lead to show me around on my first day.
  • It was kind of Sarah to cover my shift last Friday.
  • It was careless of him to send the email to the wrong client.

Adjectives that fit this pattern describe character or behaviour: kind, generous, careless, silly, stupid, inconsiderate, unfair, typical.

Notice the difference: nice of someone comments on their character, while nice to (from the section above) describes the thing itself.

Reaction Adjectives: sorry to …, surprised to …

When you react to something you hear or experience, use adjective + to …:

  • I was glad to hear you got the promotion.
  • We were relieved to learn that the project was still on track.
  • She was surprised to find the office empty at 9 a.m.
  • I’m sorry to say we won’t be renewing the contract.

Common adjectives here: glad, pleased, relieved, surprised, amazed, sad, disappointed, sorry.

the first / the last / the only + to …

After the first, the last, the only, the next, the second (etc.), you can use to + infinitive:

  • She was the first to finish the quarterly report.
  • He was the last to leave the office every night.
  • I was the only one to notice the error in the spreadsheet.
  • The next person to present will be Yuki from the marketing team.

sure / likely / bound + to …

Use sure, likely, and bound + to … to talk about how probable something is:

AdjectiveMeaningExample
bound toalmost certainThe deal is bound to go through — both sides have agreed.
sure tovery probable (similar to bound to)With her experience, she’s sure to get the job.
likely toprobableInterest rates are likely to rise next quarter.
not likely toprobably won’t happenHe’s not likely to change his mind at this point.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

The instructions were terrible. They were impossible _____.

Select your answer:

Question 2

It was very _____ of Mark to lend us the meeting room at short notice.

Select your answer:

Question 3

Everybody was late except Kenji. He was the only one _____ on time.

Select your answer:

Question 4

I was _____ to discover that the entire team had already been informed.

Select your answer:

Question 5

The merger is _____ to happen before the end of the year — both boards have approved it.

Select your answer:

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