I find I spend a LOT of my day talking about things I want, or things I want other people to do. When talking about things I want (pizza, more money, time, etc) the usage is very straightforward. But when expressing the desire for something to happen, the structure becomes a bit more complicated.
Simple examples:
- I want a new car.
- I want a bigger house.
More complicated examples with multiple subjects:
- I want you to wash the dishes.
- They want us to arrive early.
- I want my hair to grow faster.
Note that in all of these cases, the following structure is used:
Subject + “want” + object/pronoun + “to” + infinitive verb and optional ending.
Let’s break this down with the first example from above: “I want you to wash the dishes.”:
- subject: “I”
- “want”
- object/pronoun: “you”
- “to”
- infinitive verb: “wash”
- optional ending: “the dishes”
Forming questions
When forming questions with this structure, the following patterns can be used:
- Question word (What, when, where, how)
- “do”
- object/pronoun
- “want”
- object/pronoun
- “to”
- infinitive verb
- optional ending
Some example questions:
- What do you want me to bring to the party?
- When do you want us to arrive?
- Where do you want her to put the flowers?
- How do you want them to act?
Using the first example, we see it follows our pattern:
- What
- do
- you
- want
- me
- to
- bring
- to the party?
Note that the word “want” can be changed to “need” in all of these cases in order to increase the intensity of the desire.