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wish
Dear teachers,
1) Would you please tell me if the following sentences are correct and if they have different meanings:
a) I wish you WOULD COME to my party.
b) I wish you COME to my party.
c) I wish you CAME to my party.
“Please come to my party.” (sentence transformation) =
I wish you would come to my party OR I wish you come to my party ?
2) when do we use the present subjunctive after "wish" and expressions followed by "that" and when do we use "should + infinitive"?
Your help is very much appreciated.
Best regards,
Hela
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Re: wish

Originally Posted by
hela Dear teachers,
1) Would you please tell me if the following sentences are correct and if they have different meanings:
a) I wish you WOULD COME to my party.
b) I wish you COME to my party.
c) I wish you CAME to my party.
Sentences a and c are correct. The verb in b must be "hope".
A expresses a hope for the future. In C, the party is over and the listener missed it. The past perfect would be better there, in my opinion.
I wish you had come to my party.
“Please come to my party.” (sentence transformation) =
I wish you would come to my party OR I wish you come to my party ?
The first.
2) when do we use the
present subjunctive after "wish" and expressions followed by "that" and when do we use "
should + infinitive"?
I am having a difficult time coming up with a present subjunctive after "wish that". We use the past subjunctive quiote often for things that we wish were true but aren't. I also don't use "should + infinitive" after "wish that", but a Brit might. :wink:
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I agree with Mike. Say:
- I wish you had come to my party.
"I wish you came to my party" doesn't make sense to me. The use of "would come" in this context indicates desire; the used of "had come" indicates disappointment.
:)
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Originally Posted by
RonBee I agree with Mike. Say:
- I wish you had come to my party.
"I wish you came to my party" doesn't make sense to me. The use of "would come" in this context indicates desire; the used of "had come" indicates disappointment.
:)
Good explanation. People do use the simple past there, but it grates on my ear. :x
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