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Subjunctive Mood

How the subjunctive expresses doubt, desire, emotion and unreality in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Compare languages

Spanish uses the subjunctive extensively across many contexts. English preserves it only in fossilized forms (were, be, that he speak). Chinese has no subjunctive — context and adverbs handle the meaning.

Examples

Doubt/uncertainty

Es posible que llueva (subjunctive)

Desire/wish

Quiero que vengas (subjunctive)

Contrary to fact (present)

Si fuera rico, viajaría (imperfect subjunctive)

Emotion

Me alegro de que vengas (subjunctive)

Imperative (negative)

No vengas (present subjunctive)

Relative clause (unknown)

Busco un libro que sea interesante (subjunctive)

Frequency of use

Very frequent (daily)

Examples

Doubt/uncertainty

It may rain (modal + base verb)

Desire/wish

I want you to come (infinitive)

Contrary to fact (present)

If I were rich, I would travel (were)

Emotion

I'm glad you're coming (indicative)

Imperative (negative)

Don't come (do + not)

Relative clause (unknown)

I'm looking for a book that is interesting (indicative)

Frequency of use

Very rare (fossilized)

Examples

Doubt/uncertainty

nénghuìxià (modal + context)

Desire/wish

xiǎngrànglái (periphrastic)

Contrary to fact (present)

guǒyǒuqiánjiùxíng (context)

Emotion

hěngāoxìnglái (indicative)

Imperative (negative)

biélái (imperative particle)

Relative clause (unknown)

zhǎoběnyǒusideshū (modification)

Frequency of use

None (not applicable)

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Doubt/uncertainty Es posible que llueva (subjunctive)It may rain (modal + base verb)nénghuìxià (modal + context)
Desire/wish Quiero que vengas (subjunctive)I want you to come (infinitive)xiǎngrànglái (periphrastic)
Contrary to fact (present) Si fuera rico, viajaría (imperfect subjunctive)If I were rich, I would travel (were)guǒyǒuqiánjiùxíng (context)
Emotion Me alegro de que vengas (subjunctive)I'm glad you're coming (indicative)hěngāoxìnglái (indicative)
Imperative (negative) No vengas (present subjunctive)Don't come (do + not)biélái (imperative particle)
Relative clause (unknown) Busco un libro que sea interesante (subjunctive)I'm looking for a book that is interesting (indicative)zhǎoběnyǒusideshū (modification)
Frequency of use Very frequent (daily)Very rare (fossilized)None (not applicable)

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Doubt/uncertainty Es posible que llueva (subjunctive)It may rain (modal + base verb)nénghuìxià (modal + context)
Desire/wish Quiero que vengas (subjunctive)I want you to come (infinitive)xiǎngrànglái (periphrastic)
Contrary to fact (present) Si fuera rico, viajaría (imperfect subjunctive)If I were rich, I would travel (were)guǒyǒuqiánjiùxíng (context)
Emotion Me alegro de que vengas (subjunctive)I'm glad you're coming (indicative)hěngāoxìnglái (indicative)
Imperative (negative) No vengas (present subjunctive)Don't come (do + not)biélái (imperative particle)
Relative clause (unknown) Busco un libro que sea interesante (subjunctive)I'm looking for a book that is interesting (indicative)zhǎoběnyǒusideshū (modification)
Frequency of use Very frequent (daily)Very rare (fossilized)None (not applicable)

Examples in context

Doubt/uncertainty

Spanish

Es posible que llueva (subjunctive)

English

It may rain (modal + base verb)

Chinese

nénghuìxià (modal + context)

Desire/wish

Spanish

Quiero que vengas (subjunctive)

English

I want you to come (infinitive)

Chinese

xiǎngrànglái (periphrastic)

Contrary to fact (present)

Spanish

Si fuera rico, viajaría (imperfect subjunctive)

English

If I were rich, I would travel (were)

Chinese

guǒyǒuqiánjiùxíng (context)

Emotion

Spanish

Me alegro de que vengas (subjunctive)

English

I'm glad you're coming (indicative)

Chinese

hěngāoxìnglái (indicative)

Imperative (negative)

Spanish

No vengas (present subjunctive)

English

Don't come (do + not)

Chinese

biélái (imperative particle)

Relative clause (unknown)

Spanish

Busco un libro que sea interesante (subjunctive)

English

I'm looking for a book that is interesting (indicative)

Chinese

zhǎoběnyǒusideshū (modification)

Frequency of use

Spanish

Very frequent (daily)

English

Very rare (fossilized)

Chinese

None (not applicable)

Key Takeaways

Spanish: The subjunctive is ubiquitous. It appears in dependent clauses after triggers of doubt, desire, emotion, impersonal expressions, and relativ...

English: The subjunctive is barely alive. It survives in a few fossilized forms: If I were..., I demand that he be..., It is important that she speak...

Chinese: Has no subjunctive whatsoever. The same sentence structures express real and unreal situations. Context, adverbs, and particles make the dis...

Key concepts compared: Doubt/uncertainty, Desire/wish, Contrary to fact (present).

Last updated: June 4, 2026