infinitive telling the purposeIs it possible to omit 'so' in 'so that' phrase?to infinitive interpretation: successiveness vs. purposeCan anyone analyze the sentence for me?“Bare infinitive” vs. “perfect infinitive” in past time narrationWhat does “In line with this theme of competition comes the expression…” mean in this paragraph?How to understand “All machines have their friction…” by Thoreau?to-infinitive: result or purpose?infinitive in the purpose clauseThe meaning of “fresh off of”Infinitive: purpose or adjectivalinfinitive : complement or purpose

How do I deal with a powergamer in a game full of beginners in a school club?

Do items de-spawn in Diablo?

If the Captain's screens are out, does he switch seats with the co-pilot?

How did Alan Turing break the enigma code using the hint given by the lady in the bar?

Who deserves to be first and second author? PhD student who collected data, research associate who wrote the paper or supervisor?

Can't find the Shader/UVs tab

Why is this plane circling around the Lucknow airport every day?

What to do when during a meeting client people start to fight (even physically) with each others?

How much stiffer are 23c tires over 28c?

What does a stand alone "T" index value do?

How do I express some one as a black person?

How do I locate a classical quotation?

Space in array system equations

How strictly should I take "Candidates must be local"?

In the late 1940’s to early 1950’s what technology was available that could melt a LOT of ice?

Force user to remove USB token

Why don't MCU characters ever seem to have language issues?

Are the terms "stab" and "staccato" synonyms?

Why does Deadpool say "You're welcome, Canada," after shooting Ryan Reynolds in the end credits?

Time travel short story where dinosaur doesn't taste like chicken

How to create a hard link to an inode (ext4)?

Virginia employer terminated employee and wants signing bonus returned

Why would a jet engine that runs at temps excess of 2000°C burn when it crashes?

They call me Inspector Morse



infinitive telling the purpose


Is it possible to omit 'so' in 'so that' phrase?to infinitive interpretation: successiveness vs. purposeCan anyone analyze the sentence for me?“Bare infinitive” vs. “perfect infinitive” in past time narrationWhat does “In line with this theme of competition comes the expression…” mean in this paragraph?How to understand “All machines have their friction…” by Thoreau?to-infinitive: result or purpose?infinitive in the purpose clauseThe meaning of “fresh off of”Infinitive: purpose or adjectivalinfinitive : complement or purpose













5
















He used his disability in order to win our votes, which is an evil way to win the election.




This is a sentence which I submit for an English class assignment,

but my teacher crossed out in order, which leaves the sentence to be:




He used his disability to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.




I asked the teacher why in order is crossed out, since it tells the purpose in this sentence structure,

having in order should be right and does not affect the meaning of the sentence.



But my teacher told me it sounds odd and doesn't flow well in her opinion, and also has nothing to do with redundancy.



Must in order be omitted in this case and Why?










share|improve this question


























    5
















    He used his disability in order to win our votes, which is an evil way to win the election.




    This is a sentence which I submit for an English class assignment,

    but my teacher crossed out in order, which leaves the sentence to be:




    He used his disability to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.




    I asked the teacher why in order is crossed out, since it tells the purpose in this sentence structure,

    having in order should be right and does not affect the meaning of the sentence.



    But my teacher told me it sounds odd and doesn't flow well in her opinion, and also has nothing to do with redundancy.



    Must in order be omitted in this case and Why?










    share|improve this question
























      5












      5








      5


      1







      He used his disability in order to win our votes, which is an evil way to win the election.




      This is a sentence which I submit for an English class assignment,

      but my teacher crossed out in order, which leaves the sentence to be:




      He used his disability to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.




      I asked the teacher why in order is crossed out, since it tells the purpose in this sentence structure,

      having in order should be right and does not affect the meaning of the sentence.



      But my teacher told me it sounds odd and doesn't flow well in her opinion, and also has nothing to do with redundancy.



      Must in order be omitted in this case and Why?










      share|improve this question















      He used his disability in order to win our votes, which is an evil way to win the election.




      This is a sentence which I submit for an English class assignment,

      but my teacher crossed out in order, which leaves the sentence to be:




      He used his disability to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.




      I asked the teacher why in order is crossed out, since it tells the purpose in this sentence structure,

      having in order should be right and does not affect the meaning of the sentence.



      But my teacher told me it sounds odd and doesn't flow well in her opinion, and also has nothing to do with redundancy.



      Must in order be omitted in this case and Why?







      meaning-in-context infinitives






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 12 hours ago









      KathyKathy

      796




      796




















          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          8














          I wouldn't say it's incorrect. But it's rather verbose. It doesn't change the meaning. It doesn't add anything to it.



          I think in order to would make more sense at the beginning of the sentence.




          In order to win our votes, he used his disability.







          share|improve this answer






























            5














            He used his disability (in order) to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.



            In many cases, it's optional, and a matter of style, though it is a useful test for determining whether an infinitival clause is a purpose adjunct.



            In finite clause constructions, it is more or less obligatory in examples such as in Open the wine in order that it can breathe, where dropping "in order" results in an unacceptable sentence, though acceptability can be restored by replacing it with "so".






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

              – Sabre
              9 hours ago











            • @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

              – BillJ
              8 hours ago



















            3














            I don't think it must be omitted in this case, but I think your teacher's edit constitutes an improvement.



            Not every correction from a teacher happens because something is "incorrect." Teachers should help students improve their writing, and this change is an improvement.



            In an article entitled 47 words and phrases that slow your reader down, the author urges: Cut the fluff (shortening "in order to" to "to" is one of the recommendations).



            In an article entitled 15 Clunky Phrases to Eliminate From Your Writing Today – How to Crack Down on Wordiness, the author writes:




            In most cases, the phrase “in order to” works just as well without the “in order”, with the infinitive form of the verb on its own. For example, the phrase, “In order to assess the author’s intentions” would work just as well if it read, “To assess the author’s intentions”, and no unnecessary words will have been used.




            And #168 on this list of Flabby Words and Phrases reads:




            In order to – Redundant phrase. You don’t need in order. Example: In order to succeed, you must work hard. Better: To succeed, you must work hard.




            You were correct when you said that the extra words don't affect the meaning of your sentence. When that's the case, though, the more concise wording is generally preferred. I think your teacher is giving sound advice.






            share|improve this answer






























              2














              “In order to” works in some contexts like this but not others. I agree with your teacher. One does something in order to achieve an end, but here, “He used his disability” is not something he did whose purpose needs to be explained by following it with “in order to”. It’s kind of like “for the purpose of.” This sounds bad:




              He used his disability for the purpose of winning our votes.




              That doesn’t sound right, because he does not use his disability only for a certain purpose (like winning votes). He always has a disability.



              If you replaced “used” with “exploited” I think “for the purpose of” or “in order to” would sound less strange. “Exploiting” is what he actually did. Or “played up” or “emphasized”.






              share|improve this answer






























                0














                Bit of a dissenting opinion: I prefer your original sentence, it's a perfectly natural use of "in order to", in my opinion. It stresses the "for the purpose of" focus of the sentance, as with the simple "to" some readers will think the stress is "votes" or "win" or some other aspect.



                It's certainly correct and grammatical and well within what I might expect to read or hear in public discourse.






                share|improve this answer






























                  0














                  Actually, in this case "in order" does add something to the sentence, but it adds something that doesn't fit. "to" has several different senses. Consider "He bought scissors to have something to open the package with" versus "He used the scissors to open the package". In the first, we are talking about some future plans, while in the second we're talking about a present use. "in order" fits with the first, but not the second. "He bought scissors in order to have something to open the package with" would be overly wordy, but correct. "He used to the scissors in order to open the package" would be just weird.



                  Here, the second sense makes sense. But if you put "in order" in there, then you are saying "He used his disability, and the reason he used his disability was to get votes", when "He used his disability, and the thing he used his disability towards was getting votes" makes more sense. If it were instead "He talked about his disability a lot to get votes", then putting "in order" in there would make sense, albeit still overly wordy.






                  share|improve this answer






















                    Your Answer








                    StackExchange.ready(function()
                    var channelOptions =
                    tags: "".split(" "),
                    id: "481"
                    ;
                    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

                    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
                    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
                    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
                    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
                    createEditor();
                    );

                    else
                    createEditor();

                    );

                    function createEditor()
                    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
                    heartbeatType: 'answer',
                    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
                    convertImagesToLinks: false,
                    noModals: true,
                    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
                    reputationToPostImages: null,
                    bindNavPrevention: true,
                    postfix: "",
                    imageUploader:
                    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
                    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
                    allowUrls: true
                    ,
                    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
                    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
                    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
                    );



                    );













                    draft saved

                    draft discarded


















                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function ()
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200271%2finfinitive-telling-the-purpose%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                    );

                    Post as a guest















                    Required, but never shown

























                    6 Answers
                    6






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes








                    6 Answers
                    6






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    active

                    oldest

                    votes






                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    8














                    I wouldn't say it's incorrect. But it's rather verbose. It doesn't change the meaning. It doesn't add anything to it.



                    I think in order to would make more sense at the beginning of the sentence.




                    In order to win our votes, he used his disability.







                    share|improve this answer



























                      8














                      I wouldn't say it's incorrect. But it's rather verbose. It doesn't change the meaning. It doesn't add anything to it.



                      I think in order to would make more sense at the beginning of the sentence.




                      In order to win our votes, he used his disability.







                      share|improve this answer

























                        8












                        8








                        8







                        I wouldn't say it's incorrect. But it's rather verbose. It doesn't change the meaning. It doesn't add anything to it.



                        I think in order to would make more sense at the beginning of the sentence.




                        In order to win our votes, he used his disability.







                        share|improve this answer













                        I wouldn't say it's incorrect. But it's rather verbose. It doesn't change the meaning. It doesn't add anything to it.



                        I think in order to would make more sense at the beginning of the sentence.




                        In order to win our votes, he used his disability.








                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered 11 hours ago









                        Andrew TobilkoAndrew Tobilko

                        1,248520




                        1,248520























                            5














                            He used his disability (in order) to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.



                            In many cases, it's optional, and a matter of style, though it is a useful test for determining whether an infinitival clause is a purpose adjunct.



                            In finite clause constructions, it is more or less obligatory in examples such as in Open the wine in order that it can breathe, where dropping "in order" results in an unacceptable sentence, though acceptability can be restored by replacing it with "so".






                            share|improve this answer




















                            • 1





                              In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                              – Sabre
                              9 hours ago











                            • @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                              – BillJ
                              8 hours ago
















                            5














                            He used his disability (in order) to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.



                            In many cases, it's optional, and a matter of style, though it is a useful test for determining whether an infinitival clause is a purpose adjunct.



                            In finite clause constructions, it is more or less obligatory in examples such as in Open the wine in order that it can breathe, where dropping "in order" results in an unacceptable sentence, though acceptability can be restored by replacing it with "so".






                            share|improve this answer




















                            • 1





                              In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                              – Sabre
                              9 hours ago











                            • @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                              – BillJ
                              8 hours ago














                            5












                            5








                            5







                            He used his disability (in order) to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.



                            In many cases, it's optional, and a matter of style, though it is a useful test for determining whether an infinitival clause is a purpose adjunct.



                            In finite clause constructions, it is more or less obligatory in examples such as in Open the wine in order that it can breathe, where dropping "in order" results in an unacceptable sentence, though acceptability can be restored by replacing it with "so".






                            share|improve this answer















                            He used his disability (in order) to win our votes , which is an evil way to win the election.



                            In many cases, it's optional, and a matter of style, though it is a useful test for determining whether an infinitival clause is a purpose adjunct.



                            In finite clause constructions, it is more or less obligatory in examples such as in Open the wine in order that it can breathe, where dropping "in order" results in an unacceptable sentence, though acceptability can be restored by replacing it with "so".







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 10 hours ago

























                            answered 11 hours ago









                            BillJBillJ

                            6,3661719




                            6,3661719







                            • 1





                              In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                              – Sabre
                              9 hours ago











                            • @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                              – BillJ
                              8 hours ago













                            • 1





                              In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                              – Sabre
                              9 hours ago











                            • @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                              – BillJ
                              8 hours ago








                            1




                            1





                            In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                            – Sabre
                            9 hours ago





                            In your last paragraph, the "so" is actually not required, however it sounds archaic without it. See ell.stackexchange.com/a/182784/11142

                            – Sabre
                            9 hours ago













                            @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                            – BillJ
                            8 hours ago






                            @Sabre That's why I used the word "acceptability", not "grammaticality".

                            – BillJ
                            8 hours ago












                            3














                            I don't think it must be omitted in this case, but I think your teacher's edit constitutes an improvement.



                            Not every correction from a teacher happens because something is "incorrect." Teachers should help students improve their writing, and this change is an improvement.



                            In an article entitled 47 words and phrases that slow your reader down, the author urges: Cut the fluff (shortening "in order to" to "to" is one of the recommendations).



                            In an article entitled 15 Clunky Phrases to Eliminate From Your Writing Today – How to Crack Down on Wordiness, the author writes:




                            In most cases, the phrase “in order to” works just as well without the “in order”, with the infinitive form of the verb on its own. For example, the phrase, “In order to assess the author’s intentions” would work just as well if it read, “To assess the author’s intentions”, and no unnecessary words will have been used.




                            And #168 on this list of Flabby Words and Phrases reads:




                            In order to – Redundant phrase. You don’t need in order. Example: In order to succeed, you must work hard. Better: To succeed, you must work hard.




                            You were correct when you said that the extra words don't affect the meaning of your sentence. When that's the case, though, the more concise wording is generally preferred. I think your teacher is giving sound advice.






                            share|improve this answer



























                              3














                              I don't think it must be omitted in this case, but I think your teacher's edit constitutes an improvement.



                              Not every correction from a teacher happens because something is "incorrect." Teachers should help students improve their writing, and this change is an improvement.



                              In an article entitled 47 words and phrases that slow your reader down, the author urges: Cut the fluff (shortening "in order to" to "to" is one of the recommendations).



                              In an article entitled 15 Clunky Phrases to Eliminate From Your Writing Today – How to Crack Down on Wordiness, the author writes:




                              In most cases, the phrase “in order to” works just as well without the “in order”, with the infinitive form of the verb on its own. For example, the phrase, “In order to assess the author’s intentions” would work just as well if it read, “To assess the author’s intentions”, and no unnecessary words will have been used.




                              And #168 on this list of Flabby Words and Phrases reads:




                              In order to – Redundant phrase. You don’t need in order. Example: In order to succeed, you must work hard. Better: To succeed, you must work hard.




                              You were correct when you said that the extra words don't affect the meaning of your sentence. When that's the case, though, the more concise wording is generally preferred. I think your teacher is giving sound advice.






                              share|improve this answer

























                                3












                                3








                                3







                                I don't think it must be omitted in this case, but I think your teacher's edit constitutes an improvement.



                                Not every correction from a teacher happens because something is "incorrect." Teachers should help students improve their writing, and this change is an improvement.



                                In an article entitled 47 words and phrases that slow your reader down, the author urges: Cut the fluff (shortening "in order to" to "to" is one of the recommendations).



                                In an article entitled 15 Clunky Phrases to Eliminate From Your Writing Today – How to Crack Down on Wordiness, the author writes:




                                In most cases, the phrase “in order to” works just as well without the “in order”, with the infinitive form of the verb on its own. For example, the phrase, “In order to assess the author’s intentions” would work just as well if it read, “To assess the author’s intentions”, and no unnecessary words will have been used.




                                And #168 on this list of Flabby Words and Phrases reads:




                                In order to – Redundant phrase. You don’t need in order. Example: In order to succeed, you must work hard. Better: To succeed, you must work hard.




                                You were correct when you said that the extra words don't affect the meaning of your sentence. When that's the case, though, the more concise wording is generally preferred. I think your teacher is giving sound advice.






                                share|improve this answer













                                I don't think it must be omitted in this case, but I think your teacher's edit constitutes an improvement.



                                Not every correction from a teacher happens because something is "incorrect." Teachers should help students improve their writing, and this change is an improvement.



                                In an article entitled 47 words and phrases that slow your reader down, the author urges: Cut the fluff (shortening "in order to" to "to" is one of the recommendations).



                                In an article entitled 15 Clunky Phrases to Eliminate From Your Writing Today – How to Crack Down on Wordiness, the author writes:




                                In most cases, the phrase “in order to” works just as well without the “in order”, with the infinitive form of the verb on its own. For example, the phrase, “In order to assess the author’s intentions” would work just as well if it read, “To assess the author’s intentions”, and no unnecessary words will have been used.




                                And #168 on this list of Flabby Words and Phrases reads:




                                In order to – Redundant phrase. You don’t need in order. Example: In order to succeed, you must work hard. Better: To succeed, you must work hard.




                                You were correct when you said that the extra words don't affect the meaning of your sentence. When that's the case, though, the more concise wording is generally preferred. I think your teacher is giving sound advice.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered 8 hours ago









                                J.R.J.R.

                                99.8k8129247




                                99.8k8129247





















                                    2














                                    “In order to” works in some contexts like this but not others. I agree with your teacher. One does something in order to achieve an end, but here, “He used his disability” is not something he did whose purpose needs to be explained by following it with “in order to”. It’s kind of like “for the purpose of.” This sounds bad:




                                    He used his disability for the purpose of winning our votes.




                                    That doesn’t sound right, because he does not use his disability only for a certain purpose (like winning votes). He always has a disability.



                                    If you replaced “used” with “exploited” I think “for the purpose of” or “in order to” would sound less strange. “Exploiting” is what he actually did. Or “played up” or “emphasized”.






                                    share|improve this answer



























                                      2














                                      “In order to” works in some contexts like this but not others. I agree with your teacher. One does something in order to achieve an end, but here, “He used his disability” is not something he did whose purpose needs to be explained by following it with “in order to”. It’s kind of like “for the purpose of.” This sounds bad:




                                      He used his disability for the purpose of winning our votes.




                                      That doesn’t sound right, because he does not use his disability only for a certain purpose (like winning votes). He always has a disability.



                                      If you replaced “used” with “exploited” I think “for the purpose of” or “in order to” would sound less strange. “Exploiting” is what he actually did. Or “played up” or “emphasized”.






                                      share|improve this answer

























                                        2












                                        2








                                        2







                                        “In order to” works in some contexts like this but not others. I agree with your teacher. One does something in order to achieve an end, but here, “He used his disability” is not something he did whose purpose needs to be explained by following it with “in order to”. It’s kind of like “for the purpose of.” This sounds bad:




                                        He used his disability for the purpose of winning our votes.




                                        That doesn’t sound right, because he does not use his disability only for a certain purpose (like winning votes). He always has a disability.



                                        If you replaced “used” with “exploited” I think “for the purpose of” or “in order to” would sound less strange. “Exploiting” is what he actually did. Or “played up” or “emphasized”.






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        “In order to” works in some contexts like this but not others. I agree with your teacher. One does something in order to achieve an end, but here, “He used his disability” is not something he did whose purpose needs to be explained by following it with “in order to”. It’s kind of like “for the purpose of.” This sounds bad:




                                        He used his disability for the purpose of winning our votes.




                                        That doesn’t sound right, because he does not use his disability only for a certain purpose (like winning votes). He always has a disability.



                                        If you replaced “used” with “exploited” I think “for the purpose of” or “in order to” would sound less strange. “Exploiting” is what he actually did. Or “played up” or “emphasized”.







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered 11 hours ago









                                        MixolydianMixolydian

                                        2,628511




                                        2,628511





















                                            0














                                            Bit of a dissenting opinion: I prefer your original sentence, it's a perfectly natural use of "in order to", in my opinion. It stresses the "for the purpose of" focus of the sentance, as with the simple "to" some readers will think the stress is "votes" or "win" or some other aspect.



                                            It's certainly correct and grammatical and well within what I might expect to read or hear in public discourse.






                                            share|improve this answer



























                                              0














                                              Bit of a dissenting opinion: I prefer your original sentence, it's a perfectly natural use of "in order to", in my opinion. It stresses the "for the purpose of" focus of the sentance, as with the simple "to" some readers will think the stress is "votes" or "win" or some other aspect.



                                              It's certainly correct and grammatical and well within what I might expect to read or hear in public discourse.






                                              share|improve this answer

























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                Bit of a dissenting opinion: I prefer your original sentence, it's a perfectly natural use of "in order to", in my opinion. It stresses the "for the purpose of" focus of the sentance, as with the simple "to" some readers will think the stress is "votes" or "win" or some other aspect.



                                                It's certainly correct and grammatical and well within what I might expect to read or hear in public discourse.






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                Bit of a dissenting opinion: I prefer your original sentence, it's a perfectly natural use of "in order to", in my opinion. It stresses the "for the purpose of" focus of the sentance, as with the simple "to" some readers will think the stress is "votes" or "win" or some other aspect.



                                                It's certainly correct and grammatical and well within what I might expect to read or hear in public discourse.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered 8 hours ago









                                                CCTOCCTO

                                                1,08735




                                                1,08735





















                                                    0














                                                    Actually, in this case "in order" does add something to the sentence, but it adds something that doesn't fit. "to" has several different senses. Consider "He bought scissors to have something to open the package with" versus "He used the scissors to open the package". In the first, we are talking about some future plans, while in the second we're talking about a present use. "in order" fits with the first, but not the second. "He bought scissors in order to have something to open the package with" would be overly wordy, but correct. "He used to the scissors in order to open the package" would be just weird.



                                                    Here, the second sense makes sense. But if you put "in order" in there, then you are saying "He used his disability, and the reason he used his disability was to get votes", when "He used his disability, and the thing he used his disability towards was getting votes" makes more sense. If it were instead "He talked about his disability a lot to get votes", then putting "in order" in there would make sense, albeit still overly wordy.






                                                    share|improve this answer



























                                                      0














                                                      Actually, in this case "in order" does add something to the sentence, but it adds something that doesn't fit. "to" has several different senses. Consider "He bought scissors to have something to open the package with" versus "He used the scissors to open the package". In the first, we are talking about some future plans, while in the second we're talking about a present use. "in order" fits with the first, but not the second. "He bought scissors in order to have something to open the package with" would be overly wordy, but correct. "He used to the scissors in order to open the package" would be just weird.



                                                      Here, the second sense makes sense. But if you put "in order" in there, then you are saying "He used his disability, and the reason he used his disability was to get votes", when "He used his disability, and the thing he used his disability towards was getting votes" makes more sense. If it were instead "He talked about his disability a lot to get votes", then putting "in order" in there would make sense, albeit still overly wordy.






                                                      share|improve this answer

























                                                        0












                                                        0








                                                        0







                                                        Actually, in this case "in order" does add something to the sentence, but it adds something that doesn't fit. "to" has several different senses. Consider "He bought scissors to have something to open the package with" versus "He used the scissors to open the package". In the first, we are talking about some future plans, while in the second we're talking about a present use. "in order" fits with the first, but not the second. "He bought scissors in order to have something to open the package with" would be overly wordy, but correct. "He used to the scissors in order to open the package" would be just weird.



                                                        Here, the second sense makes sense. But if you put "in order" in there, then you are saying "He used his disability, and the reason he used his disability was to get votes", when "He used his disability, and the thing he used his disability towards was getting votes" makes more sense. If it were instead "He talked about his disability a lot to get votes", then putting "in order" in there would make sense, albeit still overly wordy.






                                                        share|improve this answer













                                                        Actually, in this case "in order" does add something to the sentence, but it adds something that doesn't fit. "to" has several different senses. Consider "He bought scissors to have something to open the package with" versus "He used the scissors to open the package". In the first, we are talking about some future plans, while in the second we're talking about a present use. "in order" fits with the first, but not the second. "He bought scissors in order to have something to open the package with" would be overly wordy, but correct. "He used to the scissors in order to open the package" would be just weird.



                                                        Here, the second sense makes sense. But if you put "in order" in there, then you are saying "He used his disability, and the reason he used his disability was to get votes", when "He used his disability, and the thing he used his disability towards was getting votes" makes more sense. If it were instead "He talked about his disability a lot to get votes", then putting "in order" in there would make sense, albeit still overly wordy.







                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered 4 hours ago









                                                        AcccumulationAcccumulation

                                                        1,38016




                                                        1,38016



























                                                            draft saved

                                                            draft discarded
















































                                                            Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!


                                                            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                                            But avoid


                                                            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                                            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                                            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                                            draft saved


                                                            draft discarded














                                                            StackExchange.ready(
                                                            function ()
                                                            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200271%2finfinitive-telling-the-purpose%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                                            );

                                                            Post as a guest















                                                            Required, but never shown





















































                                                            Required, but never shown














                                                            Required, but never shown












                                                            Required, but never shown







                                                            Required, but never shown

































                                                            Required, but never shown














                                                            Required, but never shown












                                                            Required, but never shown







                                                            Required, but never shown







                                                            Popular posts from this blog

                                                            Best approach to update all entries in a list that is paginated?Best way to add items to a paginated listChoose Your Country: Best Usability approachUpdate list when a user is viewing the list without annoying themWhen would the best day to update your webpage be?What should happen when I add a Row to a paginated, sorted listShould I adopt infinite scrolling or classical pagination?How to show user that page objects automatically updateWhat is the best location to locate the comments section in a list pageBest way to combine filtering and selecting items in a listWhen one of two inputs must be updated to satisfy a consistency criteria, which should you update (if at all)?

                                                            Тонконіг бульбистий Зміст Опис | Поширення | Екологія | Господарське значення | Примітки | Див. також | Література | Джерела | Посилання | Навігаційне меню1114601320038-241116202404kew-435458Poa bulbosaЭлектронный каталог сосудистых растений Азиатской России [Електронний каталог судинних рослин Азіатської Росії]Малышев Л. Л. Дикие родичи культурных растений. Poa bulbosa L. - Мятлик луковичный. [Малишев Л. Л. Дикі родичи культурних рослин. Poa bulbosa L. - Тонконіг бульбистий.]Мятлик (POA) Сем. Злаки (Мятликовые) [Тонконіг (POA) Род. Злаки (Тонконогові)]Poa bulbosa Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 70. 1753. 鳞茎早熟禾 lin jing zao shu he (Description from Flora of China) [Poa bulbosa Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 70. 1753. 鳞茎早熟禾 lin jing zao shu he (Опис від Флора Китаю)]Poa bulbosa L. – lipnice cibulkatá / lipnica cibulkatáPoa bulbosa в базі даних Poa bulbosa на сайті Poa bulbosa в базі даних «Global Biodiversity Information Facility» (GBIF)Poa bulbosa в базі даних «Euro + Med PlantBase» — інформаційному ресурсі для Євро-середземноморського розмаїття рослинPoa bulbosa L. на сайті «Плантариум»

                                                            Вунгтау (аеропорт) Загальні відомості | Див. також | Посилання | Навігаційне меню10°22′00″ пн. ш. 107°05′00″ сх. д. / 10.36667° пн. ш. 107.08333° сх. д. / 10.36667; 107.0833310°22′00″ пн. ш. 107°05′00″ сх. д. / 10.36667° пн. ш. 107.08333° сх. д. / 10.36667; 107.083337731608Vinh AirportVinh airport facelift improves serviceвиправивши або дописавши їївиправивши або дописавши їїр