Verb phrases: mood
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The verb phrase also expresses contrasts of mood. Mood refers to the factual or
non-factual status of events. Non-factual here means events which do not happen
or are only desired. The moods of English are indicative, imperative and
subjunctive.
The indicative is a factual mood. It is by far the most frequent mood, and
involves all the choices of person, tense, number, aspect, modality and voice
discussed above:
I
’ll give you a call in the week.
We
were talking about this the other day.
The imperative mood is a non-factual mood and is used to issue directives. It
involves the base form of the verb:
Sign here, please.
Just
leave it on the table.
The subjunctive mood is a non-factual mood and is very rare in English. It refers
to wishes, desires, etc. It is used after a very limited number of verbs (e.g. suggest,
insist
, recommend, demand), occasionally after conditional subordinators (e.g. if,
lest
, on condition that, whether) and occasionally after expressions of necessity
(e.g. it is important/imperative/essential that).
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