Friday, November 8, 2019
If Malgr Que Talks Supposition, Use the Subjunctive
If 'Malgr Que' Talks Supposition, Use the Subjunctive          Malgrà © queà  (even though, despite the fact that) is a conjunctive phrase (locution conjonctive) that requires the subjunctive when theres uncertainty or supposition, as in:Il le fait malgrà © quil pleuve.Hes doing it even though its raining.         Je suis venu malgrà © que je nââ¬â¢aie pas vraiment le temps.I came even though I really donââ¬â¢t have time.          The Heart of the Subjunctive      This goes to the heart of the subjunctiveà  mood, whichà  is used to express actions or ideas that are subjective or otherwise uncertain, such as will/wanting, emotion, doubt, possibility, necessity and judgment.         The subjunctive can seem overwhelming, but the thing to remember is: the subjunctive  subjectivity orà  unreality. Use this mood enough and it will become second nature...and quite expressive.         The French subjunctiveà  is nearly always found in dependent clauses introduced byà  queà  orà  qui, and the subjects of the dependent and main clauses are usually different. For example:         à   à  Je veux que tu le fasses. à  I want you to do it.à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Il faut que nous partions. à   It is necessary that we leave.          Dependent Clauses Take the Subjunctive When They:      Contain verbs and expressions that express someones will, anà  order, a need, a piece of advice or a desireContain verbs and expressions of emotion or feeling, such as fear, happiness, anger, regret, surprise, or any other sentimentsContain verbs and expressions of doubt, possibility, suppositionà  and opinionContain verbs and expressions, such asà  croire queà  (to believe that),à  dire queà  (to say that),à  espà ©rer queà  (to hope that),à  Ã ªtre certain que (to be certain that),à  il paraà ®t queà  (it appears that),à  penser queà  (to think that),à  savoir queà  (to know that),à  trouver queà  (to find/think that) andà  vouloir dire que (to mean that), which only require the subjunctive when the clause isà  negative or interrogatory. Theyà  doà  notà  take the subjunctive when they are used in the affirmative, because they express facts that are considered certain- at least in the speakers mind.Contain Frenchà  conjunctive phrasesà  (locutions conjonc   tives), groups of two or more words that have the same function as a conjunction and imply supposition.à            Contain theà  negative pronounsà  ne ... personneà  orà  ne ... rien, or theà  indefinite pronounsà  quelquunà  orà  quelque chose.  Follow main clauses containingà  superlatives. Note that in such cases,à  the subjunctive is optional, depending on how concrete the speaker feels about what is being said.à             Why Malgr Que Takes the Subjunctive      Malgrà © queà  is one of the conjunctive phrases (locutions conjonctives)à  described in number 5, many of which are listed below. These require the subjunctive because they imply uncertainty and subjectivity; it is best to try to memorize them, although you can also decide according to the meaning of the tense. Malgrà © queà  belongs to a subset of this category called opposition conjunctions, such as bien que, sauf que, sans que and others.          These Conjunctive Phrases Take the Subjunctive        condition queà   provided that   moins queà  Ã  unless   supposer queà  Ã  assuming that  afin queà  Ã  so that  avant queà  Ã  before  bien queà  Ã  although  de crainte queà  Ã  for fear that  de faà §on queà  Ã  so that, in order that, in such a way that  de manià ¨re queà  Ã  so that  de peur queà  Ã  for fear that  de sorte queà  Ã  so that  en admettant queà  Ã  assuming that  en attendant queà  Ã  while, until  encore queà  Ã  even though  jusqu ce queà  Ã  until  pour queà  Ã  so that  pourvu queà  Ã  provided that  quoiqueà  Ã  even though  quoi queà  Ã  whatever, no matter what  sans queà  Ã  without           Additional Resources      The French SubjunctiveFrench ConjunctionsThe Subjunctivator!Quiz: Subjunctive or indicative?    
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