mood indicative, imperative, subjunctive, conditional, and interrogative english language arts mrs....

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MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

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Page 1: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

MOODIndicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative

English Language Arts

Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith(edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Page 2: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

“Mood” in Grammar

The mood of a verb expresses a writer’s judgment or attitude about a statement.

Page 3: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Five Verb Moods

Indicative Imperative Interrogative Conditional Subjunctive

Page 4: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Indicative Mood

Expresses a fact or opinion

It is 84 degrees in here.

I think I am going to pass out.

Page 5: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Imperative Mood

Direct command or request The subject is implied or understood to

be you.

Show me the money.

Now give me the money.

Page 6: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Subjunctive Mood

Used to express a recommendation, a requirement, a wish or hypothetical situation, or a condition that is contrary to facts.

Generally, used only in very formal English.

Page 7: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

What does the subjunctive mood look like?The teacher recommended that I be in her

class.The judge suggested that we be given first

prize.I demand that he do the assignment.

Her mom insisted that she not play tomorrow night.

I wish you were in my English class.If I were you, I wouldn’t do that.

Page 8: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

What does the subjunctive mood look like?

Common verbs:

ask, demand, determine, insist, move, order, pray, prefer, recommend, regret, request, require, suggest, and wish.

Page 9: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)
Page 10: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

What mood? Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive?

1. Maria translates articles into Spanish.

2. I wish you were here.

3. Bring me the towels.

4. I suggest that you be quiet now.

5. Please be quiet.

6. The coach asked that each player practice twice each day.

7. The coach wishes the rugby team ___ more motivated.

Page 11: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Conditional

Indicates a conditional state that will cause something else to happen.

Common key words: could, would, should, might, or must

Page 12: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Conditional

Examples: If we use our time wisely (conditional state),

we might get to go home early. (What will happen?)

Ivan could find a better job if he visited an employment agency. (What is the conditional state?) (What would happen?)

Hill would arrive in town earlier if he leaves Brantley County tomorrow morning. (What is the conditional state?) (What would happen?)

Page 13: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Interrogative

Indicates a state of questioning In the interrogative mood, the subject-

verb order is inverted.

Page 14: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Interrogative

Examples: Will Dad take out the trash tomorrow? Have we completed the final project? Will you walk to the library tomorrow?

Page 15: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Inappropriate shifts

An inappropriate shift or inconsistency in the verb of a sentence confuses the reader. Shifts in a verb mood can make reading difficult and obscure the sentence's meaning. To correct the shift, both clauses in the sentence should be in the same mood.

Page 16: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Inappropriate Shifts

Inappropriate Shift Eat ice cream, and you will jog around

the playground.(imperative) (indicative)

Correction Eat ice cream and jog around the

playground.(imperative) (imperative)

Page 17: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Inappropriate Shifts

Inappropriate Shift You could eat ice cream, but why couldn't

you jog around the playground?(indicative) (interrogative)

Correction You could eat ice cream, and you could

jog around the playground.(indicative) (indicative)

Page 18: MOOD Indicative, Imperative, Subjunctive, Conditional, and Interrogative English Language Arts Mrs. Ryfun and Mrs. Smith (edited by Mrs. Atcheson)

Inappropriate Shift

Inappropriate Shift If you were to eat ice cream, you will jog

around the playground.(subjunctive: hint "if/were") (indicative)

Correction If you were to eat ice cream, you would

jog around the playground.(subjunctive past form "were") (subjunctive past form "would")