Monday, April 26, 2010

How Much Is A Mosin Nagant Rifle

subjunctive or conditional?

Many people mistake the use of the conditional, using it instead of the subjunctive.

I've had try this very day, on TV. During the trial cook, I heard the chef Gianfranco Vissani stumble upon this type of error, error that is due to the presence of the conjunction * if *.

So I take this opportunity to do some 'clarity:


I wonder if go to the bottom of this story

do not know if I would live a life with you

  • As you see, if you * want * the conditional when following a verb that introduces the interrogative sentence or doubt.
complicated
I wonder what would I do if I show a modicum courage
I wondered if you were going all the way

In the first case we have the verb interrogative pronoun ARISES followed by * that * + conditional
(this is how this detail - - the main verb) and then that if a where * means *, where * * and which requires the subjunctive (expresses a hypothesis)

In the second case we have a verb followed by * ASK * if + conditional (past as the past - Remote indicative - the main verb).


Benedict Conditionals! But what is the hypothetical?
To be clear, if one introduced by a * * (except when preceded by verbs or skeptical questions, we've seen). Simplify, eh.

But there is only one type of Conditionals.
periods hypothetical (to put it simply, if * i *) are of three types:
  1. Conditionals reality
  2. period of the hypothetical possibility
  3. hypothetical period of unreality (or inability)
Take a sentence like the one below:
If (you) study a lot, (You) BE PROMOTED.

And now transform it:

  1. If you study a lot, you promoted ( practically a certainty : if now studies, and much, you will have the reward and you will be promoted)
  2. if you study a lot, would promoted ( is a possibility, a probability , you study and you'll see that ...)
  3. if I had studied a lot, would have been promoted (oh no, here we did not: now the positive assumption belongs to the past, there is nothing to do )

As you see, the conditional is still , but does not follow the * if * , is on the other part of the sentence that apodo (1). After

* if * that expresses a hypothesis - feasible or not - there is the subjunctive.
And when there is the present tense in the second half - quell'apodosi of which we spoke - we always have a target, but future.

or clear all the doubt Hamlet ( conditional conditional or not) there?









___________ (1) "During the hypothetical, the main clause which expresses the consequence of the hypothesis set out in the antecedent (eg apodo: I would be happy ; protasis: if I could ). online Source: Dictionary Sabatini-Coletti .

The image of the cupboard White is taken from the website Fusion Carantini .

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