Wish and If Only: Expressing Wishes and Regrets
We use wish and if only to express desires, wishes, or regrets about situations that are not true or are unlikely to happen. If only is stronger and more emphatic than wish.
1. Wish + Past Simple (Present Wishes about the Present)
Use when you want something to be different NOW.
- “I wish I were taller.” (I am not tall.)
- “She wishes she lived near the sea.” (She lives far from the sea.)
- “If only I knew the answer!” (I don’t know.)
2. Wish + Past Perfect (Regrets about the Past)
Use when you regret something that happened or didn’t happen.
- “I wish I had studied more for the exam.” (I didn’t study.)
- “If only we hadn’t missed the bus!” (We missed it.)
- “She wishes she had taken that opportunity.” (She didn’t take it.)
3. Wish + Would (Future Wishes / Complaints)
Use to express annoyance or a desire for someone to change their behavior.
- “I wish you would stop making noise.”
- “If only it would stop raining!”
Exercises
Exercise 1: Complete with the correct form:
- I wish I _______________ (can/play) the guitar.
- If only she _______________ (not/forget) her keys yesterday!
- He wishes he _______________ (have) more free time.
- I wish you _______________ (stop) complaining all the time.
Answers
1. could play, 2. hadn’t forgotten, 3. had, 4. would stop
📍 دروس مشابهة
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Present Simple: Formation, Usage and Exercises — 1st Year M
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Present Continuous: Formation, Usage and Exercises — 1st Ye
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Simple Past: Regular and Irregular Verbs — 2nd Year Middle
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Future with Will and Going To — 2nd Year Middle School — A
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