constructions-wish-abaenglish

Grammar Constructions with “Wish”

Hello, ABA Community!

How’s it going?

How many times have you said to yourself “I wish I had studied English at school!” or “I wish I knew how to speak English well”?

These sentences include a very important verb: “to wish”. Constructions with the verb “to wish” express hypothetical, unlikely or unreal wishes and contain past tense forms.

Wish + Past Simple

This structure is used to talk about wishes for the present (or future).

Examples:

I wish I was in shape so I could run the race. (I’m not in shape)

Jane wishes she had more money.

I wish I spoke better Spanish so we could communicate with each other better.

Wish + Past Continuous

This form is used when we want to indicate that we want something to be different in the present or the future.

Examples:

I wish it wasn’t raining right now. (It is raining)

Kevin wishes he was sleeping now and not in class.

I wish you weren’t going back to Japan tomorrow.

Wish + Would/Could + Infinitive without “to”

“Would” is often used to express annoyance or irritation at a person’s actions whereas “could” is used to speak about hypothetical future situations.

Examples:

I wish she would pay more attention in class. (She doesn’t pay much attention in class)

I wish you’d stop talking to me like that in public; it’s rude!

I wish you could come on holiday with us; you need a break.

I wish you could stay for longer; your visits are always too short.

Wish + Past Perfect

This form is used to speak about past regrets or situations we wish were different.

Examples:

Emma wishes she had listened to her mum more as a child. (Emma didn’t listen to her mum enough as a child)

I wish Mike hadn’t eaten all the pizza; I’m so hungry!

I wish I had studied harder at school!

Note that “to wish” can also be used to mean “to want” in formal situations when followed by an infinitive.

Examples:

I wish to see the manager immediately!

We wish to go home now.

2 comments

  1. Thank you Brandon for your notes!

    It’s very important how to manage the verb “wish” properly. It’s very used on our usual conversations.

    With the past tenses is a bit more complex. I find it a bit hard with the conditional verb “would” and the warning verb “should”.

    Regards,

    • George Talbot

      Hi Isidro,

      Thanks for your feedback. Yes, it can be challenging sometimes. Keep up the studying and you will keep improving 🙂

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