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Wish
Let's start off with the easy part. '
I wish to' can mean the same as 'I want to' but it is much, much
more formal and much, much less common.
You can also use 'wish' with a noun to 'offer
good wishes'.
Notice that when you want to offer good wishes
using a verb, you must use 'hope ' and not 'wish'.
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We wish you the best of
luck.
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We hope you have the
best of luck.
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I wish you a safe and
pleasant journey.
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I hope you have a safe
and pleasant journey.
However, the main use of 'wish' is to say that we
would like things to be different from what they are, that we have regrets about
the present situation.
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Notice that the verb tense which follows 'I wish'
is 'more in the past' than the tense corresponding to
its
meaning.
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I'm
too fat. I wish I was thin.
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I never get
invited to parties. I wish I got invited to parties.
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It's raining. I
wish it wasn't raining.
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I went to see
the latest Star Wars film. I wish I hadn't gone.
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I've eaten too
much. I wish I hadn't eaten so much.
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I'm
going to visit her later. I wish I wasn't
going to visit her later.
In the case of 'will' , where 'will' means 'show
willingness' we use 'would'.
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He won't help me. I
wish he would help me.
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You're making too
much noise. I wish you would be quiet.
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You keep
interrupting me. I wish you wouldn't do that.
Where 'will' means a future event, we cannot use
'wish' and must use 'hope'.
In more formal English, we use the subjunctive
form 'were' and not 'was' after 'wish'.
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