-
Revision:Pluperfect Subjunctive (French)
TSR Wiki > Study Help > Subjects and Revision > Revision Notes > French > Pluperfect Subjunctive
Contents |
The Pluperfect Subjunctive
Usage
The pluperfect subjunctive is used to indicate anteriority (beforeness) with relation to the imperfect subjunctive. In that sense it is to the imperfect subjunctive what the subjonctif passé is to the subjonctif présent. Like the imperfect subjunctive, it is used extremely rarely, and almost exclusively in the 3rd person singular.
Il ne pouvait pas croire que j'eusse laissé tomber le couteau. (He couldn't believe that I had dropped the knife).
Conjugation
The pluperfect subjunctive is a temps composé, ie. it is formed with an auxiliary verb. In the case of the pluperfect subjunctive, the imperfect subjunctive of orm of the auxiliary is used, followed by the past participle of the verb. The same auxiliary verb is used as in the passé composé, passé antérieur, plus-que-parfait, etc.
Finir (takes avoir as the auxiliary verb)
- que j'eusse fini
- que tu eusses fini
- qu'il eût fini
- que nous eussions fini
- que vous eussiez fini
- qu'ils eussent fini
Venir (takes être as the auxiliary verb)
- que je fusse venu(s)
- que tu fusses venu(e)
- qu'il fût venu
- que nous fussions venu(e)(s)
- que vous fussiez venu(e)(s)
- qu'ils fussent venus