The subjunctive
has different tenses and those tenses are not confined to specific uses
i.e. you will see them operating in a range of contexts. We will begin with the
present subjunctive before looking at some uses where it frequently occurs.
[1] All forms of
the present subjunctive have the same personal endings as other verb forms:
-m
-s
-t
-mus
-tis
-nt
[2] Image #1: the
stems to which those endings are added are different, and the most common way
of remembering them is the phrase wE fEAr A lIAr.
Note the vowel lengthening in the 2nd person singular and the 1st
/ 2nd person plural:
1st
conjugation: -E- (-ē-)
“wE”: amEm,
amēs, amet, amēmus, amētis, ament
2nd
conjugation: -ea- (-eā-)
“fEAr”: habEAm,
habeās, habeat, habeāmus, habeātis, habeant
3rd
conjugation: -a- (-ā-)
“A”: vīvAm,
vīvās, vīvat, vīvāmus, vīvātis, vīvant
3rd-iō
/ 4th conjugation -ia- (-iā-)
“lIAr”: capIAm,
capiās, capiat, capiāmus, capiātis, capiant
“lIAr”: audIAm,
audiās, audiat, audiāmus, audiātis, audiant
[3] Image #2:
Irregular verbs also form their present subjunctives from a single stem + the
personal endings:
[i] eō, īre: go
eām, eās, eat, eāmus, eātis, eant
And compounds will
be formed in the same way:
[ii] sum, esse: be
sim, sīs, sit,
sīmus, sītis, sint
[iii] possum,
posse: be able (i.e. formed from sum, esse)
possim, possīs, possit, possīmus, possītis, possint


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