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Why 'were' not 'was' Hello! When I read article (http://www.bbc.com/capital/story/20170123-meet-the-people-leaving-trumps-america) I saw "... if Trump were to win the presidency" Why "Trump were" ?
27 janv. 2017 06:57
Réponses · 2
3
It’s the subjunctive mood, used in the if-clause of your unreal conditional. This conservative construction is still used a lot in American English, especially in formal writing. Americans often use it in the spoken language as well, but you’re unlikely to hear it in spoken UK English. The variation “if he were to do something” suggests that the author considers the possibility to be especially remote — more so than if he were to write “if he did something.” Another structure with the same meaning would be "should he do something," which uses inversion to state a hypothesis, rather than a question. ;)
27 janvier 2017
It's about as classical a case of the subjunctive as you can get. I would use it in speech, as would a lot of people (not just in writing), but Phil is right, some people don't bother and would say 'if Trump was to win.'
27 janvier 2017
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