0
Snappy Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Difference between hope and wish

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English gives the following example.
"I hope (NOT wish) that we'll all meet again soon."

My question is if the following usage is incorrect.

I wish that you will enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.
  

Top answer

It would be better as: I hope that you will enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year. However, 'wish' is a little stronger, but can not be inserted as a direct replacement for 'hope', without a change to the grammatical construction of the sentence. For instance: It is my wish that you enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.

  • It would be better as: I hope that you will enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.
  • However, 'wish' is a little stronger, but can not be inserted as a direct replacement for 'hope', without a change to the grammatical construction of the sentence.
  • For instance: It is my wish that you enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.
  • Now it sounds like a bullying command and could almost be interpreted as: YOU WILL ENJOY YOURSELVES, BECAUSE IF YOU DO NOT YOU WILL BE IN BIG, BIG, TROUBLE WITH ME!
  • 'Wish' is so personal that it's best used for things, you yourself wish for, rather than wish something for others, so the second sentence doesn't sound right.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
It would be better as:

I hope that you will enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.

However, 'wish' is a little stronger, but can not be inserted as a direct replacement for 'hope', without a change to the grammatical construction of the sentence. For instance:

It is my wish that you enjoy your stay in Japan when you visit me next year.
0
Apparently, Mozzilla Firefox is not the preferred browser for Forum Discussions. My abortive attempt to answer should read: 'hope' and 'wish' may seem to have the same intention, but the grammatical use is different. 'Hope' denotes desired outcome, while 'wish' denotes hypothetical desire. As Danny-K so capably conveyed, some grammatical changes to a sentence can accomodate both words in simil

Related Questions