The following is the rule given for the use of the subjunctivemood:
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We ceased all caressing tone, and changed the subjunctivemood for the imperative.
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I should think it my duty to learn the subjunctivemood, and that is impossible.'
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We Chinese never modify verbs for time or person, nor do we have anything like a subjunctivemood.
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Now, the subjunctivemood?
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The subjunctivemood being more analogous to the indicative in conjugation, than any other, it ought to be presented next in order.
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We may notice, too, that the relative pronoun, unlike the rest, is necessarily syncategorematic, for the same reason as the subjunctivemood.
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The perfect, pluperfect, and first future tenses of the subjunctivemood, are conjugated in a manner similar to the correspondent tenses of the indicative.
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The New Yorker, November 16, 1946 P. 23 Since the death of Roosevelt, the subjunctivemood has enjoyed a resurgence.
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To farm was an occupation easily parsed-subjunctivemood, past tense, passive voice!
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"Kinlay," said he, "finish the subjunctivemood, where Jessie Grey left off."
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"The subjunctivemood, past perfect tense of the verb 'to know.'"
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23:33; the subjunctivemood is worth study).
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Allen's " SubjunctiveMood in English," Battler's articles on "Prepositions" in the "Anglia," and many other valuable papers, have also been helpful and suggestive.
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"Devan and I got into a bit of an argument," Kvothe said, nodding at the scribe, "about the proper use of the subjunctivemood.