Wordsmith Talk |
About Us | What's New | Search | Site Map | Contact Us | |||
Register Log In Wordsmith Talk Forums General Topics Q&A about words That's a grammar question, really
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Hello all,
I'm having some trouble with what (in my opinion) very much resembles the French subjonctif only that it seems to be much less complex. For example:
She demanded that she be acquitted.
Questions are:
- do you English-speaking guys talk like this in real life or is it rather some kind of a formal way of expressing oneself?
- are there any particular verbs which should be followed by the that and a verb formed like in the example?
- or maybe there are some verbs which should never ever be accompanied by this creature, despite the speaker's desire?
Any help/explanation/reference to an explanation would be very welcome!
Thanks,
Lukasz
Entire Thread Subject Posted By Posted ![]()
That's a grammar question, really
lukaszd 07/01/2002 10:41 AM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
wwh 07/01/2002 12:24 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
Wordwind 07/01/2002 12:53 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
wsieber 07/01/2002 1:28 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
wwh 07/01/2002 2:15 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
Wordwind 07/01/2002 2:32 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
Keiva 07/01/2002 2:40 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
FishonaBike 07/01/2002 2:01 PM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
slithy toves 07/02/2002 1:16 AM ![]()
Re: That's a grammar question, really
lukaszd 07/02/2002 6:17 AM
Moderated by Jackie
Link Copied to Clipboard
Forum Rules · Mark All Read Contact Us · Forum Help · Wordsmith Talk