to be indicative of something
21significant — ► ADJECTIVE 1) extensive or important enough to merit attention. 2) having an unstated meaning; indicative of something. DERIVATIVES significantly adverb …
22significantly — significant ► ADJECTIVE 1) extensive or important enough to merit attention. 2) having an unstated meaning; indicative of something. DERIVATIVES significantly adverb …
23in|di|cant — «IHN duh kuhnt», adjective, noun. –adj. that indicates; indicative. –n. something that indicates a suitable remedy or treatment: »A symptom is an indicant …
24pre|cur|so|ry — «prih KUR suhr ee», adjective. indicative of something to follow; introductory. SYNONYM(S): prefatory, preliminary …
25indicatively — indicative ► ADJECTIVE 1) serving as a sign or indication. 2) Grammar (of a form of a verb) expressing a simple statement of fact, rather than something imagined, wished, or commanded. ► NOUN Grammar ▪ an indicative verb. DERIVATIVES indicatively …
26Mari language — Mari марий йылме marij jəlme Spoken in Russian Federation: autonomous republics Mari El, Bashkortostan, Tatarstan, Udmurtia; oblasti Nizhny Novgorod, Kirov, Sverdlovsk, Orenburg; Perm Krai …
27Grammatical mood — Grammatical categories Animacy Aspect Case Clusivity Definiteness Degree of comparison Evidentiality Focus …
28Subjunctive 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… …
29Romance languages — Romance Geographic distribution: Originally Southern Europe and parts of Africa; now also Latin America, Canada, parts of Lebanon and much of Western Africa Linguistic classification: Indo European Italic …
30Maidu language — Northeastern Maidu Májdy Spoken in United States Region California Native speakers 1 or 2  (date missing) …