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- Grammatical_mood abstract "In linguistics, grammatical mood (sometimes mode) is a grammatical (and specifically, morphological) feature of verbs, used to signal modality.That is, it is the use of verbal inflections that allow speakers to express their attitude toward what they are saying (for example, whether it is intended as a statement of fact, of desire, of command, etc.). Less commonly, the term is used more broadly to allow for the syntactic expression of modality — that is, the use of non-inflectional phrases. Mood is distinct from grammatical tense or grammatical aspect, although the same word patterns are used to express more than one of these meanings at the same time in many languages, including English and most other modern Indo-European languages. (See tense–aspect–mood for a discussion of this.)Some examples of moods are indicative, interrogatory, imperative, emphatic, subjunctive, injunctive, optative, potential. Infinitive is a category apart from all these finite forms, and so are gerunds and participles. Some Uralic Samoyedic languages have more than ten moods; Nenets has as many as sixteen. The original Indo-European inventory of moods consisted of indicative, subjunctive, optative, and imperative. Not every Indo-European language has each of these moods, but the most conservative ones such as Avestan, Ancient Greek, and Sanskrit have them all. English has the indicative, imperative, emphatic, and subjunctive moods; others, such as the conditional, do not appear as morphologically distinct forms.Not all of the moods listed below are clearly conceptually distinct. Individual terminology varies from language to language, and the coverage of (e.g.) the "conditional" mood in one language may largely overlap with that of the "hypothetical" or "potential" mood in another. Even when two different moods exist in the same language, their respective usages may blur, or may be defined by syntactic rather than semantic criteria. For example, the subjunctive and optative moods in Ancient Greek alternate syntactically in many subordinate clauses, depending on the tense of the main verb. The usage of the indicative, subjunctive, and jussive moods in Classical Arabic is almost completely controlled by syntactic context. The only possible alternation in the same context is between indicative and jussive following the negative particle lā.".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink MoodandModal.pdf.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink gmood.html.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsAssumptiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDeclarativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDeductiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDeliberativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDeonticModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDirectiveModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsDubitativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsEpistemicModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsHypotheticalMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsImmediateImperativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsImperativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsImprecativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsInterrogativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsIrrealisModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsJudgmentModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsJussiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsObligativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsOptativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsPermissiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsPrecativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsProhibitiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsSpeculativeMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsSubjunctiveMood.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageExternalLink WhatIsVolitiveModality.htm.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageID "23534467".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageRevisionID "604748928".
- Grammatical_mood hasPhotoCollection Grammatical_mood.
- Grammatical_mood subject Category:Grammatical_moods.
- Grammatical_mood subject Category:Linguistics_lists.
- Grammatical_mood subject Category:Modality.
- Grammatical_mood type Abstraction100002137.
- Grammatical_mood type Attribute100024264.
- Grammatical_mood type Feeling100026192.
- Grammatical_mood type GrammaticalMoods.
- Grammatical_mood type State100024720.
- Grammatical_mood type Temper107551052.
- Grammatical_mood comment "In linguistics, grammatical mood (sometimes mode) is a grammatical (and specifically, morphological) feature of verbs, used to signal modality.That is, it is the use of verbal inflections that allow speakers to express their attitude toward what they are saying (for example, whether it is intended as a statement of fact, of desire, of command, etc.). Less commonly, the term is used more broadly to allow for the syntactic expression of modality — that is, the use of non-inflectional phrases.".
- Grammatical_mood label "Grammatical mood".
- Grammatical_mood label "Mode (grammaire)".
- Grammatical_mood label "Modo (linguistica)".
- Grammatical_mood label "Modo gramatical".
- Grammatical_mood label "Modo verbal".
- Grammatical_mood label "Modus (Grammatik)".
- Grammatical_mood label "Tryb (językoznawstwo)".
- Grammatical_mood label "Wijs".
- Grammatical_mood label "Наклонение (лингвистика)".
- Grammatical_mood label "法 (文法)".
- Grammatical_mood label "语气".
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Slovesný_způsob.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Modus_(Grammatik).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Διάθεση_(γραμματική).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Modo_gramatical.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Mode_(grammaire).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Modus.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Modo_(linguistica).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs 法_(文法).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs 서법.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Wijs.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Tryb_(językoznawstwo).
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Modo_verbal.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs m.03dkf.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Q184932.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Q184932.
- Grammatical_mood sameAs Grammatical_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wasDerivedFrom Grammatical_mood?oldid=604748928.
- Grammatical_mood isPrimaryTopicOf Grammatical_mood.