B2

Subjunctive Forms in Dutch

Conjunctief/Aanvoegende Wijs

Overview

The subjunctive mood (de conjunctief or aanvoegende wijs) is one of the rarest grammatical forms you will encounter in modern Dutch. Unlike languages such as French or Spanish, where the subjunctive is alive and frequently required, Dutch has largely abandoned it in everyday speech. However, it survives in a handful of fixed expressions, formal writing, and ceremonial language that you will inevitably come across.

At the B2 level, you are not expected to produce subjunctive forms spontaneously, but you should recognize them when you hear or read them. These fossilized expressions appear in toasts, wishes, legal texts, and literary prose. Understanding them gives you a window into older layers of the Dutch language and helps you appreciate formal or elevated registers.

The subjunctive is formed using the verb stem (for the present subjunctive) or the simple past tense form (for the past subjunctive). Since the forms often look identical to the indicative, context is your main clue that a subjunctive is being used.

How It Works

Present Subjunctive

The present subjunctive uses the bare verb stem for all persons. In practice, you will only see it in third-person singular expressions where it differs visibly from the indicative (which would add -t).

Infinitive Indicative (3rd sg.) Subjunctive (3rd sg.) Example
leven leeft leve Leve de koning!
zijn is zij Het zij zo.
geven geeft geve God geve het.
rusten rust ruste Hij ruste in vrede.
zegenen zegent zegene God zegene u.
komen komt kome Kome wat komt.

Past Subjunctive

The past subjunctive uses the simple past form, sometimes in inverted constructions that signal a hypothetical or contrary-to-fact meaning. This overlaps with the conditional and is mostly found in formal or literary Dutch.

Construction Meaning
Ware het niet dat... Were it not that...
Mocht het zo zijn dat... Should it be that...
Ware ik maar rijk! If only I were rich!
Had ik het maar geweten! If only I had known!

Where You Will Find It

  • Toasts and wishes: Leve de bruid! (Long live the bride!)
  • Religious and ceremonial language: God zegene u.
  • Legal and official texts: ...opdat recht geschiede (so that justice may be done)
  • Proverbs and fixed expressions: Het zij zo. Kome wat komt.
  • Literary prose: Ware het niet dat hij kwam...

Examples in Context

Dutch English Note
Leve de koning! Long live the king! Most common subjunctive expression
Het zij zo. So be it. Fixed expression of acceptance
God zegene u. God bless you. Ceremonial / religious
Ware het niet dat hij kwam... Were it not that he came... Formal, literary
Hoe het ook zij... However it may be... Formal concession
Moge hij rusten in vrede. May he rest in peace. Funeral / memorial
Leve de vrijheid! Long live freedom! Toast or rally cry
Het kome wat het wil. Come what may. Fixed expression
Men neme twee eieren. One takes two eggs. Archaic recipe style
Wie het ook zij... Whoever it may be... Formal writing
Mocht u vragen hebben... Should you have questions... Polite formal letter
Ware ik maar thuis gebleven. If only I had stayed home. Literary regret

Common Mistakes

Trying to Use the Subjunctive Productively

  • Wrong: Ik wil dat hij kome. (attempting a subjunctive clause)
  • Right: Ik wil dat hij komt.
  • Why: Modern Dutch uses the indicative in subordinate clauses. The subjunctive is only correct in fixed expressions, not in productive grammar.

Confusing Subjunctive with Imperative

  • Wrong: Interpreting Leve de koning! as an imperative ("Live, king!")
  • Right: Understanding it as a wish: "May the king live!" / "Long live the king!"
  • Why: The subjunctive expresses a wish or hope, not a command. The form looks like a stem but functions differently.

Adding -t to Fixed Expressions

  • Wrong: Leeft de koning!
  • Right: Leve de koning!
  • Why: The whole point of the subjunctive is the absence of the -t ending. Adding it turns the expression into a regular indicative statement.

Overusing Archaic Constructions

  • Wrong: Using ware and moge in casual conversation
  • Right: Reserving these for formal writing, speeches, or quotations
  • Why: These forms sound extremely old-fashioned in spoken Dutch and may come across as pretentious or humorous if used casually.

Usage Notes

The subjunctive is far more common in written Dutch than in speech. You will encounter it in newspaper editorials, academic prose, official documents, and literature. In Belgium (Flanders), some subjunctive expressions are slightly more common in formal speech than in the Netherlands, but the difference is small.

In the Netherlands, the expression moge(n) in wishes (e.g., Moge het u goed gaan) is perceived as very formal or even old-fashioned. Belgians may use it a bit more readily in ceremonial contexts. The expression het zij zo is universally understood but rarely said outside of dramatic or humorous contexts.

Modern Dutch speakers typically use modal verbs (mogen, zullen, laten) to express wishes and hypotheticals instead of the subjunctive: Laat hij maar komen rather than Hij kome.

Practice Tips

  • Collect fixed subjunctive expressions as vocabulary items rather than trying to learn the subjunctive as a productive rule. Make flashcards for leve, het zij zo, moge, kome wat komt, and similar phrases.
  • Read formal Dutch texts such as newspaper opinion pieces, royal speeches, or legal documents and highlight any subjunctive forms you find. This builds passive recognition.
  • Listen to Dutch ceremonial occasions (royal addresses, memorial services) where these forms appear naturally and practice recognizing them in real-time speech.

Related Concepts

  • Prerequisite: Simple Past -- the past subjunctive builds on simple past verb forms
  • Next steps: Archaic Forms -- other surviving elements of older Dutch grammar

Prerequisite

Simple Past in DutchB1

More B2 concepts

Want to practice Subjunctive Forms in Dutch and more Dutch grammar? Create a free account to study with spaced repetition.

Get Started Free