-
languages have a
single realis mood called the
indicative mood,
although some
languages have
additional realis moods, for
example to
express different...
- Indo-European languages. (See tense–aspect–
mood for a
discussion of this.) Some
examples of
moods are
indicative, interrogative, imperative, subjunctive...
- one of the
irrealis moods,
which refer to what is not
necessarily real. It is
often contrasted with the
indicative, a
realis mood which prin****lly indicates...
- well as
imperative mood. In the
compound verbal constructions,
there are
forms for the
indicative mood, the
conditional mood, a
mood for
conditional possibility...
- The
imperative mood is a
grammatical mood that
forms a
command or request. The
imperative mood is used to
demand or
require that an
action be performed...
- Person: first,
second or
third T–V distinction:
familiar or
formal Mood:
indicative, subjunctive, or
imperative Aspect:
perfective or
imperfective (distinguished...
-
forms of the
first aorist contain an α. The
indicative forms are
similar to the imperfect, and the
other moods,
except for the subjunctive, are
similar to...
-
tense and to all
person forms in the
active potential mood –
everything else is regular.
Indicative present: olen = I am olet = you are on = he/she/it is...
-
eight simple tense–aspect–
mood forms,
categorized into the
indicative,
subjunctive and
imperative moods, with the
conditional mood sometimes viewed as an...
- in the
indicative only. As well as the
indicative mood,
Ancient Gr**** had an imperative, subjunctive, and
optative mood. The
imperative mood is found...