tim80110
Why is it sometimes "j’aie" I was working on my French today and I still can't understand why "j'aie" is sometimes used instead of j'ai. From what I can find, it's a subjective for "avoir." All I know is it's not used all that often, but looks like a significant rule to understand and be confident about. Thank you.
7 de abr de 2013 00:51
Respostas · 4
The subjunctive mood is used to express actions or ideas which are subjective or otherwise uncertain: will/wanting, emotion, doubt, possibility, necessity, judgment. It is nearly always found in dependent clauses introduced by que or qui, and the subjects of the dependent and main clauses are usually different. Je veux que tu le fasses. I want you to do it. Il faut que j'aie de la confiance. it is necessary that I have confidence. The subjunctive can seem overwhelming, but the thing to remember is the subjunctive = subjectivity, unreality. That should help you figure it out at least 90% of the time.
7 de abril de 2013
My Spanish teacher used to say that if you're on the fence about whether to use the subjunctive or not, use it, and you'll be right 95% of the time. That success rate will be lower in French, which is more conservative in subjunctive use, I think, than Spanish. But French uses it much more than in English, where sentences like "It's important that you *be* on time are increasingly rare. I would not say it's "not used all that often." Try this. Hope it helps: http://french.about.com/library/verb/bl-subjunctivator.htm
7 de abril de 2013
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