Page:The New Latin Primer (Postgate).djvu/188

174 DEPENDENT SENTENCES.

§ 386. — § 387. .— § 388. Note the following differences from English :

{a) The Imperfect Subjunctive in Conditional statements, even when it refers to present time [§ 242(a)], takes Secondary tenses.

(b) The Present in General Statements (§ 177) is usually changed to the Imperfect after Secondary tenses.

(c) The Perfect Subjunctive, when it refers to the Future (§§ 225 (C), 240), of course takes Primary tenses.