Talking About Wishes – Conversational English

Sample Response

Thinking…
Conversational Lesson

Talking About
Wishes

Express your dreams, share your regrets, and politely complain about everyday annoyances like a native speaker.

1

Warm-up Questions

Prompt 01

If you could change one thing about your daily routine, what would it be?

Prompt 02

Think about yesterday. Is there anything you wish you had done differently?

Prompt 03

What is a small habit other people do that really annoys you?

2

The 3 Rules of Wishing

In English, the grammar changes based on what you are wishing for. Here is how it works:

1. Desiring Right Now

Wish + Past Simple

Use this when you want your present situation to be different.

  • “I wish I had more money.”
  • “I wish I lived closer to the beach.”

2. Past Regrets

Wish + Past Perfect

Use this when you regret something that already happened.

  • “I wish I had studied harder in school.”
  • “I wish we hadn’t eaten so much.”

3. Annoyances

Wish + Would

Use this when you are annoyed and want someone’s behavior to change.

  • “I wish you would stop tapping your pen.”
  • “I wish the train would arrive.”
3

The “Hope vs. Wish” Trap

Many students confuse these two. Tap the cards to see the natural corrections.

Common Mistake

I wish it rains tomorrow.

Natural English

I hope it rains tomorrow.

Use “hope” for possible future events.

Common Mistake

I hope I had a million dollars.

Natural English

I wish I had a million dollars.

Use “wish” for imaginary or impossible things.

Common Mistake

I wish you will come to my party.

Natural English

I hope you can come to my party.

Again, it’s a realistic future possibility, so use “hope”.

4

Listening: Real Wishes & Regrets

Arthur

Arthur, 74

Past Regret

Marcus

Marcus, 45

Annoyance

Elena

Elena, 28

Present Desire

5

Make A Wish Practice

Sample Answer
Scenario #1

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6

Let’s Chat

If you could live anywhere in the world right now, where would you wish to be?

Is there anything you wish you had studied or learned when you were younger?

Think about your city. What is one thing you wish the government would change?

Do you think having regrets (wishing things had been different) is healthy or unhealthy?

If you won the lottery tomorrow, what is the first thing you would buy?

If a genie gave you 3 wishes, but you couldn’t wish for money, what would they be?

7

Ready for the Quiz

You’ve mastered the grammar of wishing, hoping, and regretting. Let’s test your knowledge!

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