Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Grammatical_mood> ?p ?o }
- Grammatical_mood abstract "In linguistics, grammatical mood (also mode) is a grammatical feature of verbs, used for signaling modality.That is, it is the use of verbal inflections that allow speakers to express their attitude toward what they are saying (e.g. a statement of fact, of desire, of command, etc.). The term is also used more broadly to describe the syntactic expression of modality, that is, the use of verb phrases that do not involve inflexion of the verb itself.Mood is distinct from grammatical tense or grammatical aspect, although the same word patterns are used for expressing 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. These are all finite forms of the verb. Infinitives, gerunds, and participles, which are non-finite forms of the verb, are not considered to be examples of moods. 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 all of these moods, but the most conservative ones such as Avestan, Ancient Greek, and Sanskrit have them all. English has indicative, imperative, emphatic, and subjunctive moods; other moods, 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 wikiPageLength "18365".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageOutDegree "78".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageRevisionID "703862872".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Albanian_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Archaism.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Avestan.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Leviticus.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Category:Grammatical_moods.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Category:Linguistics_lists.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Category:Modality.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Arabic.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Compound_verb.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Conditional_sentence.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Dependent_clause.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink E-Prime.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Eskimo–Aleut_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Finite_verb.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Finnish_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Fossilization_(linguistics).
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Gerund.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Grammar.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_aspect.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_conjugation.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_tense.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Greenlandic_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Hypothetical_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Indo-European_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Infinitive.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Inflection.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Jussive_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Kazakh_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink King_James_Version.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Linguistic_modality.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Linguistics.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Nenets_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Nepali_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Nominal_TAM.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Optative_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Participle.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Polarity_item.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Protasis.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Realis_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Romance_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink SIL_International.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Sami_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Samoyedic_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Seri_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Set_phrase.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Subjunctive_mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Syntax.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Tense–aspect–mood.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Uralic_languages.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Verb.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Voice_(grammar).
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLink Welsh_language.
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "''mood''".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "''moods''".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Grammatical mood".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Indicative mood".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Indicative".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Modal".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mode".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mood".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Moods".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "Negative".
- Grammatical_mood wikiPageWikiLinkText "conditional mood".