Basics. Subjunctive in Fixed Expressions
Subjunctive in Fixed Expressions
The English subjunctive mood often feels like a relic of the past, but it survives perfectly intact in several everyday idiomatic phrases. We use these fixed expressions to express hypothetical situations, concessions, or strong wishes without altering the verb for tense or subject agreement. For example, you might say, "If she wants to leave early, then so be it," or "Come what may, we will finish this project."
In this challenge, you will help a cast of dramatic characters—including a skeptical accountant, a stubborn knight, and a frustrated theater director—navigate these tricky idioms. You will practice correctly formulating and applying common subjunctive phrases such as far be it from me, be that as it may, suffice it to say, heaven forbid, and as it were.
You will work through 10 questions in a mix of single-choice, multi-choice, drop-down, and drag-and-drop formats to master these archaic but essential English phrases.
Try the quiz to check your knowledge!
Phrase
Phrase vs clause: a phrase has NO subject-verb pair (on the table, the old man). A clause HAS a subject-verb pair (the man sat, because she left). This is the fundamental structural division in grammar — clauses contain phrases, not the other way around.
A phrase = group of words functioning as one unit: noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, adjective/adverb phrase. No subject + verb.
Diagnostic: does the word group have both a subject AND a verb? Yes → clause. No → phrase. Name the head word to identify the phrase type (noun = NP, preposition = PP, etc.).
Sentence
Sentence vs clause vs phrase: a phrase has no subject-verb pair. A clause has subject + verb. A sentence is one or more clauses packaged with end punctuation as a complete thought. These three levels — phrase ⊂ clause ⊂ sentence — are the structural hierarchy of English.
A sentence is the largest grammatical unit: one+ clauses ending with a period, question mark, or exclamation mark. Four structural types: simple, compound, complex, compound-complex.
Diagnostic: does it have at least one independent clause AND end punctuation? Yes → sentence. Missing independent clause? → fragment. Missing end punctuation? → run-on.
Subjunctive mood
Subjunctive vs indicative: indicative states facts (He goes every day). Subjunctive marks unreality (I suggest he go; If I were you). The subjunctive drops the -s and insists on were — signalling "this isn't (or may not be) real." In informal speech it's disappearing, but formal/academic writing still expects it.
The subjunctive mood = hypothetical/counterfactual marker. Present subjunctive (base form after suggest/demand/insist that). Past subjunctive (were in unreal conditionals).
Diagnostic: is the clause about something unreal, demanded, or recommended (not yet true)? → subjunctive. Is it factual? → indicative.
Verb
Verb vs noun vs adjective: nouns name things. Adjectives describe. Verbs express what happens or what IS. The test: can it take tense (walked, will walk)? Can it take -ing? Can it follow to as an infinitive (to walk)? Yes to any → verb. English often converts freely between classes (run = noun or verb), so context decides.
A verb = action/state/occurrence word. 5 forms (base, -s, past, past participle, -ing). Carries tense, aspect, mood, voice. The one required element in every sentence.
Diagnostic: does it change for tense (walk → walked)? Can you put to before it (to walk)? Does it take -ing (walking)? → verb.
Verb mood
Mood vs tense: tense tells you WHEN (past/present/future). Mood tells you the speaker's ATTITUDE (fact/command/hypothetical). She goes (indicative + present) vs Go! (imperative) vs I wish she went (subjunctive + past form but present meaning). Mood and tense work independently.
Verb mood = attitude marking. Indicative (facts), imperative (commands), subjunctive (unreal), conditional (dependent). Each uses different verb forms or auxiliaries.
Diagnostic: is the speaker stating a fact? → indicative. Commanding? → imperative. Imagining something unreal? → subjunctive. Expressing what would happen under a condition? → conditional.
Word order
English (SVO) vs other patterns: English relies on word ORDER to show who does what (Dog bites man ≠ Man bites dog). Inflected languages (Latin, Russian, German) use case endings and can scramble order freely. In English, changing order changes meaning or requires special constructions (inversion, cleft sentences).
Word order = how English marks grammatical relationships. SVO is the default; fixed adjective order; adverb placement varies by type.
Diagnostic: does your sentence sound "off" even though all word forms are correct? → probably a word order issue. Try moving the element back to default SVO position.
Idiom
Idiom vs collocation: both are fixed expressions, but idioms are opaque — the meaning is hidden (kick the bucket ≠ literally kicking). Collocations are transparent — the meaning is clear (heavy rain = a lot of rain). Collocations sound wrong if you swap words; idioms make no sense if you translate literally.
An idiom is a fixed phrase whose meaning can't be derived from its parts. They must be learned whole — and they're everywhere in casual and native English.
Diagnostic: does the literal meaning make sense? Yes → probably a collocation. No (absurd or unrelated) → idiom.
C1 | Advanced
C1 vs C2: C1 means fluent and flexible use with occasional gaps in very unfamiliar domains. C2 means native-like command of idiom, irony, and register across any subject. If you can handle advanced grammar but still miss cultural nuance or very rare idioms, you're C1.
C1 is the advanced CEFR level: inversion, cleft sentences, subjunctive mood, advanced conditionals, and precise register control in professional and academic contexts.
Diagnostic: can you write persuasively in different registers and catch subtle irony? Consistently → C2. Sometimes → C1.
Hard
Hard vs Medium: Medium tests one rule with realistic distractors. Hard tests interacting rules, edge cases, or context-dependent answers where multiple options seem correct until you think deeply. If you're scoring 80%+ on Medium, try Hard to find your real gaps.
The Hard tag filters for B2+ challenges with layered difficulty: rule interactions, subtle distractors, and contexts that demand genuine grammatical reasoning.
Diagnostic: if Hard questions feel impossible, drop to Medium and master the individual rules first. Hard assumes you already know each rule — it tests whether you can apply them together.