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were

 
Dictionary: were   (wûr) pronunciation

v.
  1. Second person singular and plural and first and third person plural past indicative of be.
  2. Past subjunctive of be. See Usage Note at if, wish.

[Middle English were, weren, from Old English wǣre, wǣren, wǣron.]

Our Living Language   Although many irregular verbs in English once had different singular and plural forms in the past tense, only one still does today-be, which uses the form was with singular subjects and the form were with plural subjects, as well as with singular you. The relative simplicity in the forms of most verbs reflects the long-standing tendency of English speakers to make irregular verbs more regular by reducing the number of forms used with different persons, numbers, and tenses. Since past be is so irregular, speakers of different vernacular dialects have regularized it in several ways. In the United States, most vernacular speakers regularize past be by using was with all subjects, whether singular or plural. This pattern is most common in Southern-based dialects, particularly African American Vernacular English (AAVE). Some speakers use were with both singular and plural subjects; thus, one may hear she were alongside we were. However, this usage has been much less widespread than the use of was with plural subjects and appears to be fading. • In some scattered regions in the South, particularly in coastal areas of North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland, vernacular speakers may regularize past be as was in positive contexts and regularize it as weren't in negative contexts, as in He was a good man, weren't he? or They sure was nice people, weren't they? At first glance, the was/weren't pattern appears to come from England, where it is fairly commonplace. However, in-depth study of the was/weren't pattern in coastal North Carolina indicates that it may have developed independently, for it is found to a greater extent in the speech of younger speakers than in that of older coastal residents. • Other forms of negative past be include warn't, common in American folk speech in the 18th and 19th centuries, and wont, as in It wont me or They wont home. Wont, which often sounds just like the contraction won't, historically has been concentrated in New England and is also found in scattered areas of the South.


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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: Past tense plural of be.

pronunciation Act as if it were impossible to fail. — Dorothea Broude.

Translations: Were
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Dansk (Danish)
v. infl. - var

Nederlands (Dutch)
was

Français (French)
v. infl. - s'être

idioms:

  • if I were you    si j'étais à votre place

Deutsch (German)
v. infl. - warst, waren, wart

idioms:

  • if I were you    wenn ich du od. an deiner Stelle wäre

Ελληνική (Greek)
v. - ήμαστε, ήσαστε, ήταν

Italiano (Italian)
passato indicativo e congiuntivo imperfetto di essere

idioms:

  • as it were    per così dire

Português (Portuguese)
v. - eram (imperfeito do indicativo e subjuntivo do verbo to be)

idioms:

  • as it were    como se fosse verdade

Русский (Russian)
был

idioms:

  • as it were    как будто, так сказать, своего рода

Español (Spanish)
v. infl. - erais, fuisteis, habéis, estuvisteis

idioms:

  • if I were you    si yo fuera Ud., yo en su lugar

Svenska (Swedish)
v. - var

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
be的过去式

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
v. infl. - be的過去式

한국어 (Korean)
v. infl. - be의 과거

日本語 (Japanese)
v. - …であった, いた, …であるとしたら

idioms:

  • as it were    いわば

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(فعل) كنت, كنا, كانوا, كن, كانت, كنتم, كنتن‏

עברית (Hebrew)
v. infl. - ‮היית, היינו, הייתם, היו‬


 
 

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