- Indicative mood
- "She will have a hangover tomorrow morning."
- "The Prime Minister and his cabinet were discussing the matter on that fateful day in 1939."
- Imperative mood
- "Keep your eyes on the prize, hold on"
- "'Your father's urn is on the backseat. Just leave the keys in the cup holder."
- Subjunctive mood
- "I demanded that Sheriff Jeanfreau stay. I even wanted worthless and annoying Ugly Henderson to stay."[59]
- "'I suggest that you not exercise your temper overmuch,' Mayne said, and the French tinge in his voice sounded truly dangerous now." [60]
- Subjunctives can be used after conditional subordinators.[49]
- "I accepted on the condition that I not be given a starring role."[61]
- Subjunctives can also be used after expressions of necessity.[49]
- "Two nuns are asked to paint a room in the convent, and the last instruction of Mother Superior is that they not get even a drop of paint on their habits."[62]
- The subjunctive form of the verb "be" can occur as the base form "be".[49]
- "Whenever a prisoner alleges physical abuse, it is imperative that the prisoner be seen by an officer at the earliest possible opportunity."[63]
- In its "were" form the subjunctive is used to express a hypothetical situation.[49]
- "'Lin said, turning toward Pei, "I'm afraid she's excited at seeing me home again." Pei smiled. "I would be too, if I were she."[64]
[edit] Adjectives
According to Carter and McCarthy, "Adjectives describe properties, qualities, and states attributed to a noun or a pronoun."[65] As was the case with nouns and verbs, the class of adjectives cannot be identified by the forms of its constituents.[65] However, adjectives are commonly formed by adding the some suffixes to nouns.[65] Examples: "-al" ("habitual," "multidimensional," "visceral"), "-ful" ("blissful," "pitiful," "woeful"), "-ic" ("atomic," "gigantic," "pedantic"), "-ish" ("impish," "peckish," "youngish"), "-ous" ("fabulous," "hazardous"). As with nouns and verbs, there are exceptions: "homosexual" can be a noun, "earful" is a noun, "anesthetic" can be a noun, "brandish" is a verb. Adjectives can also be formed from other adjectives through the addition of a suffix or more commonly a prefix:[65] weakish, implacable, disloyal, irredeemable, unforeseen. A number of adjectives are formed by adding "a" as a prefix to a verb: "adrift," "astride," "awry."- Gradability
In figurative or literary language, a non-gradable adjective can sometimes be treated as gradable, especially in order to emphasize some aspect:
- "When a man's verses cannot be understood, nor a man's good wit seconded with a forward child, understanding, it strikes a man more dead than a great reckoning in a little room."[67]
- "... the bell seemed to sound more dead than it did when just before it sounded in open air."[68]
[edit] Adjective phrases
- Forms
Adjectives are usually modified by adverb phrases (adverb in boldface; adjective in italics):[69]
- "... placing himself in a dignified and truly imposing attitude, began to draw from his mouth yard after yard of red tape ..."[70]
- "Families did certainly come, beguiled by representations of impossibly cheap provisions, though the place was in reality very expensive, for every tradesman was a monopolist at heart."[71]
- "... of anger frequent but generally silent, ..."[72]
- "... during that brief time I was proud of myself, and I grew to love the heave and roll of the Ghost ..."[73]
- "... her bosom angry at his intrusion, ..."[74]
- "Dr. Drew is especially keen on good congregational singing."[75]
- "Was sure that the shrill voice was that of a man—a Frenchman."[76]
- "The longest day that ever was; so she raves, restless and impatient."[77]
- "Few people were ever more proud of civic honours than the Thane of Fife."[78]
- Attributive and predicative
- "Truly selfish genes do arise, in the sense that they reproduce themselves at a cost to the other genes in the genome."[79]
- "Luisa Rosado: a woman proud of being a midwife"[80]
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