| Present wishes indicate something that is contrary to fact. That is, wishes are something that is untrue but desired. For example, | I wish that I had a sports car. I wish that I were a doctor. | (The truth is I don't have a sports car.) (I'm really not a doctor.) | For present wishes, the past tense is used in the that clause, because it indicates a situation that is only imagined. Sometimes the word that is omitted. To express possibility (can) and future intention (will), use the modals could and would respectively. When a be verb is required, the word were is used, regardless of the subject. |