Module code: 165

📚 pathway 687dfba12b89f

Understanding and Using ‘I wish!’

1 Understanding ‘Wish’ Structures

When we want to express regret about present situations or desire for change, we use different forms of ‘wish’. These forms help us express hypothetical situations we want to be different:

wish + past simple: for present/future desires that are impossible or unlikely
wish + past continuous: for ongoing situations we want to change
wish + would: for persistent behaviors that annoy us (never used with ‘I’)

Key Terms

regret
a feeling of sadness about something that has happened or not happened
hypothetical
imagined or suggested but not necessarily real or true
persistent
continuing to happen or exist over a long period

💬 Section 1: Campus Complaints

Paolo and Jenny discussing current circumstances at university

Paolo: “I wish I had less work to do. This workload is killing me.”
Jenny: “I know what you mean. I wish the professors would coordinate their assignment schedules better.”
Paolo: “And I wish we had more time between deadlines. Three essays due on the same day is ridiculous!”
Jenny: “Yeah, these circumstances are far from ideal. I wish they would consider our other commitments.”
Paolo: “I wish things were different. The persistent pressure is really getting to me.”
Jenny: “Have you tried talking to your academic advisor? I wish students wouldn’t suffer in silence.”
Paolo: “You’re right. That’s worth a try.”

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2 Structure Comparison

Structure | Usage | Example
—|—|—
wish + past simple | Present desires/regrets | I wish I was taller
wish + past continuous | Ongoing situations | I wish it wasn’t raining constantly
wish + would | Complaints about others | I wish you would stop being so irritating

Key Terms

taller
of greater height
constantly
continuously, all the time
irritating
causing annoyance or irritation

💬 Section 2: Personal Changes

Paolo sharing personal wishes with Jenny during gym session

Paolo: “Sometimes I wish I was slimmer. These new gym circumstances aren’t helping.”
Jenny: “I wish you wouldn’t be so hard on yourself. You’re making good progress.”
Paolo: “It’s just so irritating. I wish I could see results faster.”
Jenny: “Change takes time. I wish people would stop comparing themselves to others.”
Paolo: “You constantly say that. I wish I had your confidence.”
Jenny: “Well, I wish we could all see ourselves as others see us.”
Paolo: “Maybe you’re right. I wish I were able to do that”
Jenny: “That’s more like it! Shall we focus on your strength training instead?”

Join YSP to Practice ThisThis AI Driven Dialogue Practice is a YSP Members Feature – Click the button to see the benefits of YSP membership

🔍 Grammar & Structure Focus

Wish Past Simple

Form: Subject + wish + past simple/could

Usage: Express desires about present/future situations

Examples:

  • “I wish I was slimmer”
  • “I wish I had less work to do”

Wish Past Continuous

Form: Subject + wish + past continuous

Usage: Express desires about ongoing situations

Examples:

  • “I wish it wasn’t raining”
  • “I wish they weren’t making so much noise”

Wish Would

Form: Subject + wish + would + infinitive

Usage: Express annoyance or criticism about others’ actions

Examples:

  • “I wish you would stop talking”
  • “I wish they would be quiet”

📝 Key Vocabulary Recap

regreta feeling of sadness about something that has happened or not happened
hypotheticalimagined or suggested but not necessarily real or true
irritatingcausing annoyance or irritation
constantlycontinuously, all the time
tallerof greater height
slimmerthinner, more slender in shape
workloadthe amount of work assigned or expected to be done
circumstancesthe conditions affecting a situation
criticismthe expression of disapproval based on perceived faults
persistentcontinuing to happen or exist over a long period
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