CaoimhínSF wrote:
I'm editing this to correct my response, because I just went to read the Wikipedia article on the subjunctive
To save everyone needing to head to Wikipedia, "subjunctive" literally means it's after a con
junction where the clause is
subordinate to another one -- ie cannot be understood independently.
Conjunctions like "and", "but" and "because" don't take the subjunctive, because both clauses remain true if taken on their own.
eg
I bought a sandwich because I was hungry.goes to:
I bought a sandwich. I was hungry.What we call the "subjunctive" in languages like English and Spanish is, as noted "irrealis", because it's either hypothetical or untrue. Things that are not "irrealis" can appear in subordinate clauses too, but we call the irrealis "subjunctive" because it
only appears in that position. (Except when it doesn't -- eg "the Lord be with you" is subjunctive, despite not having a superordinate clause -- but in such cases we consider the other clause to be implied.)
Does Irish have a subjunctive?
The answer is a definite "depends on your point of view". "Go" is the stereotypical subordinating conjunction (to use the technical jargon), but the verb form that follows it is the
dependent form, which also occurs in questions and negatives. Historically, the dependent form
is a hypothetical/irrealis subjunctive, because the negative and question particles actually incorporate
is.
eg
An bhfuil tusa go maith? =
Is it (that) you be well? (?Es que estés bien?)
So either "dependent" and "subjunctive" are synonymous in terms of Irish grammar, or there is no "subjunctive" per se.
Sorry, I know this is a mind-twisting tangent, but I'm a bit bored today.