I wish it ............ true
Ahad
Bwill
Cwere
Dcould
Answer:
C. were
Read Explanation:
Understanding the Subjunctive Mood in English Grammar
- The sentence 'I wish it .......... true' uses the subjunctive mood, which expresses a desire, hypothetical situation, or something contrary to fact.
- In reported speech, when the reporting verb is in the past tense (like 'wished'), the verb in the reported clause often shifts back.
- For wishes about the present or future that are contrary to fact, the past subjunctive is used. This is formed using 'were' for all persons (I, you, he, she, it, we, they).
- Example: 'He wishes he were taller.' (He is not taller now, which is a present reality.)
- Example: 'She wishes it were sunny.' (It is not sunny now.)
- The structure 'I wish + past subjunctive' is a common grammatical construction tested in competitive exams to check understanding of verb tenses and moods.
- Pay attention to the distinction between wishes about the present/future (using past subjunctive 'were') and wishes about the past (using past perfect 'had + past participle').
- Example for past wishes: 'I wish I had studied harder for the exam.' (The studying happened in the past.)
- In the context of indirect speech, if the original direct speech was 'I wish it is true' or 'I wish it will be true', when reported using a past tense reporting verb, the verb shifts to the past subjunctive 'were'.
- This rule is crucial for identifying grammatically correct sentences in questions involving reported speech and verb conjugation.