Like, Dislike, and Preference D. Efita N.R., M.PD: If You Love Something
Like, Dislike, and Preference D. Efita N.R., M.PD: If You Love Something
Things to remember…
Grammar Note
When speaking generally, it's easiest to use plurals with count nouns, for examples:
Common mistake
Be careful where you put very much or a lot. These words should go after the thing that you
like. For example, "I like reading very much." NOT "I like very much reading."
Expressing Preferences
Sometimes you need to state a preference when someone makes a suggestion, offers
something or asks your opinion about what to do. Often people are asking for your opinion
and you can state your preference freely, other times, people have made an offer and you
need to state a preference politely if you do not want to do what has been suggested, or would
rather do something else.
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 livingin the country.
We use "would prefer" to say what somebody wants in a particular situation (not in general):
• "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.
Would rather (do) = would prefer (to do). After would rather we use the infinitive without to.
Compare:
When you want somebody to do something, you can say "I'd rather you did something":
In this structure we use the past (came, did etc.), but the meaning is present or future, not
past.
Compare:
but • I'd rather you cooked the dinner now. (not "I'd rather you cook")