Sentences:
1) Thus, each student defines how he or she wants his or her stay at the residence hall to be like and adapts it to his or her needs
(Thus, each student defines how he or she wants his or her to stay at the residence hall to be like and adapts it to his or her needs)
.
2) She wants revenge
(She wants to revenge)
.
3) She wants me dead
(She wants me to dead / to be dead)
Question:
Should they add a preposition 'to' after the verb 'want'?
Best Answer
The verb want can be used in several ways. According to the Cambridge Dictionary, the relevant options for these contexts are
The object is stay, which in this context is a noun, so no to is required.
The object is revenge which can only be a noun, so no to is required. The corresponding verb is avenge.
The object is me, and dead is a participle that the speaker wants invoked on the object. No to is required for a past participle.
The verb be is a verb infinitive and does require to. This is not a natural sentence, and most speakers would use the participle version. It would be completely natural if the participle were replaced by a normal adjective: