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A Door Into Hindi: Lesson 18

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18.3

Past Subjunctive / Past Conditional

Youknow how to use the normal subjunctive (optative) to talk about future eventsthat are uncertain, desired, or conditional. Hindi also has apastsubjunctive tense which allows us to talk about past events that areconditional (“if I had gone…”), counterfactual (“I would have gone”), hypothetical(“I would go”), or regretted (“if only I had gone”).

Thepast subjunctive is simply the imperfect form of the verb with no auxiliaryverb:

अगर वह वहाँ जाती तो वह मुझसे मिलती।

If she had gone there, she would have met me.

मैं आपके साथ फ़िल्म ज़रूर देखता लेकिन

I would certainly have seen the film with you but…

The wordकाश may be used to introduce a past subjunctivesentence expressing regret or a wish that something were otherwise:

काश मेरे पास बहुत पैसा होता।

I wish I had a lot of money.

काश ये मर्द लोग हमारी बात सुनते।

I wish these men-folk listened to what we say.

काश तुम समझतीं।

I wish you understood.

Note:with a feminine plural subject (e.g. the third example above), when there is noauxiliary verb to indicate the plural, the “dot” should be transferred to the mainverb.


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