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The Italian Past Subjunctive: How to Express Doubt and Emotion About Things That Already Happened

6 min read · Grammar

Once you know the present subjunctive (congiuntivo presente) and the passato prossimo, the past subjunctive is easy to form — it is simply the present subjunctive of the auxiliary verb plus the past participle. The challenge is knowing when to use it: the triggers are identical to the present subjunctive, but the action being described happened in the past. Master this and you will sound genuinely fluent when expressing opinions, doubts, and emotions about things that have already occurred.

The congiuntivo passato is formed using the present subjunctive of avere (abbia, abbia, abbia, abbiamo, abbiate, abbiano) or essere (sia, sia, sia, siamo, siate, siano) plus the past participle. The choice between avere and essere follows the same rules as the passato prossimo. With essere verbs, the past participle agrees in gender and number with the subject.

Formation: Congiuntivo Passato

AuxiliaryFormulaExample
avereabbia/abbia... + past participleabbia mangiato (that I/he/she have/has eaten)
esseresia/sia... + past participle (agreed)sia partito/a (that I/he/she have/has left)

Congiuntivo Passato — Parlare (avere verb)

PersonFormEnglish
io/lui/leiabbia parlatothat I/he/she has spoken
tuabbia parlatothat you have spoken
noiabbiamo parlatothat we have spoken
voiabbiate parlatothat you have spoken
loroabbiano parlatothat they have spoken

Congiuntivo Passato — Andare (essere verb)

PersonMasc.Fem.English
io/lui/leisia andatosia andatathat I/he/she has gone
tusia andatosia andatathat you have gone
noisiamo andatisiamo andatethat we have gone
voisiate andatisiate andatethat you have gone
lorosiano andatisiano andatethat they have gone

When do you use the past subjunctive instead of the present? When the action in the subordinate clause happened BEFORE the action in the main clause. If the main verb is in the present tense and you are expressing an opinion, emotion, or doubt about something that already happened, use the congiuntivo passato.

Present vs Past Subjunctive — The Time Distinction

Penso che venga domani. (congiuntivo presente)

I think he is coming tomorrow. (future action)

Penso che sia già venuto. (congiuntivo passato)

I think he has already come. (past action)

Spero che stia bene. (presente)

I hope he is well. (present state)

Spero che sia guarito. (passato)

I hope he has recovered. (past event)

Congiuntivo Passato in Real Sentences

Non credo che abbia detto la verità.

I don't think he told the truth.

È possibile che siano partiti in anticipo.

It's possible they left early.

Mi dispiace che tu abbia avuto problemi.

I'm sorry you had problems.

Sono felice che sia andata bene.

I'm happy it went well.

Benché abbia studiato, non ha superato l'esame.

Even though he studied, he didn't pass the exam.

The sequence-of-tenses rule in Italian (concordanza dei tempi) guides when to use which subjunctive. When the main verb is in the PRESENT or FUTURE, use the congiuntivo presente for simultaneous/future actions and the congiuntivo passato for past actions. When the main verb is in the PAST, use the congiuntivo imperfetto for simultaneous/future actions and the congiuntivo trapassato for past actions.

Sequence of Tenses (Main Verb in Present/Future)

Main verb (present/future)Subordinate actionSubjunctive to useExample
Penso che...simultaneous / futurecongiuntivo presentePenso che sia stanco.
Penso che...earlier / pastcongiuntivo passatoPenso che sia stato stanco.
Spero che...simultaneous / futurecongiuntivo presenteSpero che vengano.
Spero che...earlier / pastcongiuntivo passatoSpero che siano venuti.
The Before/After Test

When deciding between present and past subjunctive, ask: did the subordinate action happen BEFORE the main verb's time, or at the same time (or after)? <strong>Same time or after → present subjunctive. Before → past subjunctive.</strong> This test works for about 90% of cases and is much faster than memorising abstract grammar rules.

Common subjunctive triggers to remember

Penso che / Credo cheI think that / I believe that

Penso che abbiano già finito. — I think they've already finished.

È possibile che / È probabile cheIt's possible that / It's likely that

È possibile che sia arrivata in ritardo. — It's possible she arrived late.

Sebbene / Benché / NonostanteAlthough / Even though / Despite

Sebbene abbia studiato molto, non ha passato l'esame. — Although he studied a lot, he didn't pass the exam.

Mi dispiace che / Sono contento cheI'm sorry that / I'm glad that

Sono contento che tu sia venuto. — I'm glad you came.

Advanced congiuntivo passato sentences

Non è possibile che abbiano fatto una cosa del genere.

It's not possible that they did something like that.

Dubito che abbia capito tutto quello che ho detto.

I doubt he understood everything I said.

Sono contento che la serata sia andata bene.

I'm glad the evening went well.

Anche se abbia sbagliato, non è la fine del mondo.

Even if he made a mistake, it's not the end of the world.

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