the subjunctive verb form

  • 1The Subjunctive — ◊ GRAMMAR The subjunctive is a structure which is not very common in English and which is usually regarded as formal or old fashioned. Using the subjunctive involves using the base form of a verb instead of a present or past tense, or instead of… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 2the subjunctive — ◊ GRAMMAR The subjunctive is a structure which is not very common in English and which is usually regarded as formal or old fashioned. Using the subjunctive involves using the base form of a verb instead of a present or past tense, or instead of… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 3subjunctive mood — 1. The subjunctive mood, one of the great shifting sands of English grammar, is a verbal form or mood expressing wish or hypothesis in contrast to fact, and usually denotes what is imagined, wished, demanded, proposed, and so on. In modern… …

    Modern English usage

  • 4Subjunctive in Dutch — The subjunctive mood in Dutch is a verb mood typically used in dependent clauses to express a wish, command, emotion, possibility, uncertainty, doubt, judgment, opinion, necessity, or action that has not yet occurred. It is also referred to as… …

    Wikipedia

  • 5subjunctive Grammar — [səb dʒʌŋ(k)tɪv] adjective denoting a mood of verbs expressing what is imagined or wished or possible. Compare with indicative. noun a verb in the subjunctive mood. Derivatives subjunctively adverb Origin C16: from Fr. subjonctif, ive or late L.… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 6Subjunctive — Sub*junc tive, a. [L. subjunctivus, fr. subjungere, subjunctum, to subjoin: cf. F. subjonctif. See {Subjoin}.] Subjoined or added to something before said or written. [1913 Webster] {Subjunctive mood} (Gram.), that form of a verb which express… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 7Subjunctive mood — Subjunctive Sub*junc tive, a. [L. subjunctivus, fr. subjungere, subjunctum, to subjoin: cf. F. subjonctif. See {Subjoin}.] Subjoined or added to something before said or written. [1913 Webster] {Subjunctive mood} (Gram.), that form of a verb… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 8subjunctive — Grammar ► ADJECTIVE ▪ (of a form of a verb) expressing what is imagined or wished or possible. ► NOUN ▪ a verb in the subjunctive mood. ORIGIN Latin subjunctivus, from subjungere add to, join in addition …

    English terms dictionary

  • 9The Self Banished — is a poem written by Edmund Waller in about 1645, and is one of the first songs written by the English composer Edward Elgar. It was written in 1875, and specifically for “soprano or tenor”. It is unpublished.LyricsTHE SELF BANISHED :It is not… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Subjunctive mood — In grammar, the subjunctive mood (abbreviated sjv or sbjv) is a verb mood typically used in subordinate clauses to express various states of irreality such as wish, emotion, possibility, judgment, opinion, necessity, or action that has not yet… …

    Wikipedia