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Subjunctive mood   Listen
adjective
Subjunctive  adj.  Subjoined or added to something before said or written.
Subjunctive mood (Gram.), that form of a verb which express the action or state not as a fact, but only as a conception of the mind still contingent and dependent. It is commonly subjoined, or added as subordinate, to some other verb, and in English is often connected with it by if, that, though, lest, unless, except, until, etc., as in the following sentence: "If there were no honey, they (bees) would have no object in visiting the flower." In some languages, as in Latin and Greek, the subjunctive is often independent of any other verb, being used in wishes, commands, exhortations, etc.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Subjunctive mood" Quotes from Famous Books



... singular of the passive may be used impersonally, as in Latin. The verb may be made negative through its whole conjugation, by means of inserting the particle la in the indicative, qui in the imperative which then takes the termination of the subjunctive mood, and by means of no in the subjunctive and infinitive moods, ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Vol. 5 • Robert Kerr



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