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  2. Grammatical mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_mood

    The indicative mood, or evidential mood, is used for factual statements and positive beliefs. It is the mood of reality. The indicative mood is the most commonly used mood and is found in all languages. Example: "Paul is eating an apple" or "John eats apples".

  3. Tense–aspect–mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tense–aspect–mood

    Spanish morphologically distinguishes the indicative, imperative, subjunctive, and conditional moods. In the indicative mood, there are synthetic (one-word, conjugated for person/number) forms for the present tense, the past tense in the imperfective aspect, the past tense in the perfective aspect, and the future tense.

  4. Realis mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realis_mood

    Although the indicative is generally the main or only realis mood, certain other languages have additional forms which can be categorized as separate realis moods. Arabic and various other Semitic languages have two kinds of energetic moods , which express something which is strongly believed or which the speaker wishes to emphasize.

  5. Ancient Greek verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_verbs

    In the indicative mood there are seven tenses: present, imperfect, future, aorist (the equivalent of past simple), perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect. (The last two, especially the future perfect, are rarely used). In the subjunctive and imperative mood, however, there are only three tenses (present, aorist, and perfect).

  6. Category:Grammatical moods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Grammatical_moods

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  7. Grammatical aspect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_aspect

    Each of these three aspects are formed from their participles. The aspects of Hindi when conjugated into their personal forms can be put into five grammatical moods: indicative, presumptive, subjunctive, contrafactual, and imperative. In Hindi, the aspect marker is overtly separated from the tense/mood marker.

  8. Proto-Indo-European verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_verbs

    The indicative mood was the default mood, and, alongside the imperative, the oldest. It was used for simple statements of fact. Imperfective verbs. The indicative mood was the only mood to have distinctions in tense in imperfective verbs, all other moods were tenseless. The present tense used the primary endings.

  9. Spanish verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_verbs

    Indicative mood: The indicative mood, or evidential mood, is used for factual statements and positive beliefs. The Spanish conditional, although semantically expressing the dependency of one action or proposition on another, is generally considered indicative in mood, because, syntactically, it can appear in an independent clause. Subjunctive ...