The subjunctive mood can be used either in independent clauses, which stand alone and communicate a complete thought, or dependent clauses, which are introduced by a subordinating conjunction or pronoun and need the context of a main clause to make sense. This unit handles three types of independent clauses that use a subjunctive verb as the main verb because the idea communicated by the main clause isn’t factual or verifiable (as verbs in the indicative mood would indicate).
The deliberative subjunctive, as the name implies, indicates that the speaker is deliberating on, or thinking about, what course of action should be taken or should have been taken. For example:
The answer to the question is a matter of subjective opinion, and the speaker is thinking about and deliberating on the action in the question. The question may even be rhetorical in nature. Because these questions don’t dwell in the realm of verifiable fact (as indicated by the helping verb “should”), we need to use the subjunctive moood for the verb in this kind of question.
The tense of the deliberative subjunctive indicates when this course of action should occur:
You can identify the deliberative subjunctive by the use of a subjunctive verb as a main verb in a sentence that ends with a question mark.
You should translate the deliberative subjunctive with the auxiliary verb “should”, with the core of the verb changing depending on tense and voice and with the word order rearranged to indicate a question (i.e., put the “should” at the start of the sentence and let the subject come in between the “should” and the main verb). For example:
The potential subjunctive indicates something that may, might, could, or would happen, either in the future or the past, but it’s uncertain whether it will or did happen. If it were certain, then we could use the indicative mood. The subjunctive in this case adds that note of possibility or doubt.
To indicate a potential action in the future, Latin uses the present subjunctive or, rarely, the perfect subjunctive:
To indicate a potential action in the past, Latin uses the imperfect subjunctive. Note that although the translation sounds like a perfect tense, the Latin uses the imperfect:
Potential subjunctives are negated with nōn:
Sometimes, there will be signal words like forsitan (“perhaps”) or fortasse (“perhaps”, usually with indicative but sometimes with subjunctive) to indicate the presence of a potential subjunctive:
Often, the potential is used with verbs like volō*, nōlō, mālō, and possum to indicate a note of politeness or deference:
The optative subjunctive expresses a wish. This wish could express something that the speaker hopes will happen in the future or something that the speaker wishes happened in the past (but didn’t).
Optative subjunctives are often introduced by an adverb like utinam (“if only,” “would that”, “I wish that”). Optatives are negated by utinam nē or simply nē (“if only … not”, “would that … not”, “I wish that … not”).
Wishes for a future action are indicated with the present subjunctive and are translated with the auxiliary verb “would [verb]”:
Wishes for a present action that is not coming to fruition are indicated with the imperfect subjunctive and are translated with the auxiliary verb: “were [verb]ing”:
Wishes for a past action that did not come to fruition are indicated with the pluperfect subjunctive and are translated with the auxiliary verb “had [verb]ed”:
Note that the latter two (present wish indicated by imperfect subjunctive and past wish indicated by pluperfect subjunctive) both express impossible situations that can’t be fulfilled – this impossibility, or contrary-to-fact nature of the verbal actions, results in the use of the subjunctive mood. For example, utinam venīret! (“If only he were coming!”) implies strongly that he is, in fact, not coming, but the speaker wishes that he were.
In sum, the independent uses of the subjunctive are as follows:
Type | Tense of Subj. | Sample Trans. |
---|---|---|
Present Deliberative | present | Should … [verb]? |
Past Deliberative | imperfect | Should … have [verb]ed? |
Present Potential | present [or perfect] | may (etc.) [verb] |
Past Potential | imperfect | may (etc.) have [verb]ed |
Future Optative | present | if only … would [verb] |
Present Optative | imperfect | if only … were [verb]ing |
Past Optative | pluperfect | if only … had [verb]ed |
All material developed by Daniel Libatique, Dominic Machado, and Neel Smith, and available under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license CC BY-SA 4.0