grammar - "Recommend me" vs. "Recommend to me"
In conversation, I hear people say:
"Please recommend me a book."
Or:
"Recommend me a book, please."
They omit "to," as in:
"Please recommend to me a book."
Or variations thereof, such as:
"Please recommend a book to me."
And:
"Recommend to me a book, please."
Are all of the example sentences above grammatically correct?
Edit: No, the referenced question did not answer mine, because it it asks how to is interchangeable with that, which is a somewhat different question. My question is specifically about the usage of to.
Answer
The structure of the phrase, "Recommend me a book," parallels that of "Give me a book." Let's look at that first.
A verb such as 'to give' can take an indirect and a direct object. It is a ditransitive verb (see note below).
1.
If the direct object precedes the indirect object, we must include 'to'.
Give the book to John.
However, if the indirect object precedes the direct object, you should omit 'to', e.g.
Give John the book.
2. If you want to add 'please' you can add it to the beginning or to the end of either of the above sentences. The choice is yours.
3. Other verbs act similarly to 'give', e.g.
Hand me the book. Hand the book to me.
Pass me the book. Pass the book to me.
Throw me the book. Throw the book to me.
4. Note that verbs such as this are described as ditransitive. They can take two objects. Another example is 'show'.
Show me the book. Show the book to me.
5. It is a matter of style, usage and opinion whether 'recommend' is one of those verbs. Peter Shor (in the comments) thinks it is. I think it is in the context of this question. Some people (such as Joe Dark in the comments) clearly think otherwise.
Usage, preference and context will ultimately decide.
Ditransitivity
In grammar, a ditransitive verb is a verb which takes a subject and two objects which refer to a theme and a recipient. According to certain linguistics considerations, these objects may be called direct and indirect, or primary and secondary.
Comments
Post a Comment