Examples of using Subjunctive in English and their translations into Polish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Financial
-
Official/political
-
Programming
-
Computer
Is that the subjunctive?
But the Subjunctive could be used instead.
Is also in the subjunctive.
But, the subjunctive tense is more challenging.
Penny forgot to use the subjunctive.
As always- in the subjunctive mood, because irrelevant.
Penny forgot to use the subjunctive.
Celtic have a subjunctive descended from an earlier optative in-ā.
Penny forgot to use the subjunctive.
It included subjunctive and imperative moods
Penny forgot to use the subjunctive.
OÂ While Latin used the indicative and subjunctive in conditional sentences,
Penny forgot to use the subjunctive.
The subjunctive and optative are usually marked with the secondary endings, but in the subjunctive primary desinences are attested sometimes.
You vaguely recall the imperfect subjunctive.
Thus, It can be used to oppose a Indicative Athematic to Subjunctive Thematic, b Present Thematic to Imperfect Athematic,
conditional and subjunctive.
In Thematic Verbs the Subjunctive is made from the Present Stem,
You're using"que, so it has to be the subjunctive. Nothing?
Subjunctive mood is occasionally used for some verbs,
irregular verbs in the present subjunctive.
While the oldest PIE had possibly only Indicative and Imperative, a Subjunctive and an Optative were added in Late Proto-Indo-European,
Indeed the previous verb('assaddaqa) has been correctly conjugated and is in the subjunctive.
I am getting a lot better at the subjunctive, but it is very difficult for a British person who has never even been taught about the existence of the subjunctive in English(!) to compute/process a whole new way of theoretical thinking.
is in the subjunctive.
then we can avoid what I call"living in the subjunctive world," if we can borrow an idea from grammar.
and sometimes the Subjunctive.
Imperative, Subjunctive, Optative and Participle),
because a great deal therein is worded in the subjunctive.
using periphrases with Indicative and Subjunctive(as Classic Latin), or with the Subjunctive and Optative(as Classical Greek), etc.