Using 'wish' and 'if only' for regrets in English
In English, 'wish' (and the stronger 'if only') lets you talk about regrets and things you want to be different. For a present regret, use the past simple even though you mean now: 'I wish I had more money.' For a regret about the past, step one tense further back into the past perfect: 'I wish I had studied harder.' To complain about something another person keeps doing, use 'would': 'I wish you would listen.'
Examples
- I wish I had more money. regret about the present lack of money
- I wish I had studied harder. regret about the past
- I wish you would listen. complaining about someone's behaviour
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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Say I wish I have more time and every English speaker hears the slip. After wish, the present tense is wrong. Here's what to say instead.
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We use wish to talk about things we want to be different — a regret, a complaint, a wish that reality were otherwise. The trick is which tense follows it.
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Here's the key move: after wish, step one tense back into the past. To talk about now, you use the past simple — not the present.
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So for a present regret, use the past simple. I wish I had more money. I don't have much now — and I'm not happy about it. Past form, present meaning.
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It works for situations too. I wish I lived by the sea. I don't live by the sea, but I'd love to. Again, past tense for a present wish.
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Now for a regret about the past — something already done or not done. Step back one more, to the past perfect: had plus a past participle.
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Here's the classic regret. I wish I had studied harder. I didn't study hard — and now it's too late to change it. The past perfect points to a finished past.
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And there's a third use: complaining about someone else's annoying habit. For that, use wish plus would. I wish you would listen.
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Now the trap that gives learners away. Never use the present tense after wish. It's not I wish I have more time — it's I wish I had more time.
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And don't mix up present and past regret. If it's about now, past simple. If it's about a finished past, past perfect — pick the right distance.
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So: present regret, past simple. Past regret, past perfect. Annoying habit, wish plus would. And if only is just a stronger wish — same rules.