When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Subjunctive mood in Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subjunctive_mood_in_Spanish

    A verb in this mood is always distinguishable from its indicative counterpart by their different conjugation. The Spanish subjunctive mood descended from Latin, but is morphologically far simpler, having lost many of Latin's forms. Some of the subjunctive forms do not exist in Latin, such as the future, whose usage in modern-day Spanish ...

  3. Spanish verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_verbs

    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 mood: The subjunctive mood expresses an imagined, possible or desired action in the past, present, or future.

  4. Grammatical mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_mood

    The main verb in the protasis (dependent clause) is usually in the subjunctive or in the indicative mood. However, this is not a universal trait and among others in German (as above), Finnish , and Romanian (even though the last is a Romance language), the conditional mood is used in both the apodosis and the protasis.

  5. Spanish grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_grammar

    A Spanish verb has nine indicative tenses with more-or-less direct English equivalents: the present tense ('I walk'), the preterite ('I walked'), the imperfect ('I was walking' or 'I used to walk'), the present perfect ('I have walked'), the past perfect —also called the pluperfect— ('I had walked'), the future ('I will walk'), the future ...

  6. Subjunctive mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subjunctive_mood

    The subjunctive (also known as conjunctive in some languages) is a grammatical mood, a feature of an utterance that indicates the speaker's attitude toward it.Subjunctive forms of verbs are typically used to express various states of unreality such as wish, emotion, possibility, judgment, opinion, obligation, or action that has not yet occurred; the precise situations in which they are used ...

  7. 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.

  8. Jussive mood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jussive_mood

    Classical and Standard Arabic verbs conjugate for at least three distinct moods in the imperfect: indicative, subjunctive and jussive. [ 2 ] The jussive is used after the preposition li- ( لي‍ـ- , 'to') to express a command to a third person.

  9. Spanish irregular verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_irregular_verbs

    In a diphthongizing verb, the change turns -e-into -ie-and -o-into -ue-when the syllable in question is stressed, which in effect happens only in the singular persons and third-person plural of the present indicative and present subjunctive, and in the imperative (all other tenses and forms are stressed on their endings, not their stems).