Keywords
- L322.7 S99
Intermediate
Syntax 
Week
7: Mood
Declarative Mood
- Also called the indicative mood
- Marked with the feature [-Irreal] (irrealis)
- Marks a clause that the speaker avers
to be true or false
- Can be used in a future context where
the event is certain or predictable.
Irrealis
Mood
- Any mood that is not declarative
- interrogative
- seeks out information
- two types
- normally marked as [+Strong]
- [+strong] blocks copying from out of.
- exceptions
- embedded sentences
- WH-sentences where the subject is a WH-word.
- imperative
- issues a command
- takes a host in matrix clauses
- does not in embedded clauses
- marked with that
- does not subcategorize tense or relevance.
- passive and progressive rarely used,
esp. in matrix clauses.
- conditional
- marks a condition
- takes two arguments
- consequence (main clause) and conditional
(embedded).
- marked with 'if'.
- negative conditional
- contrary-to-fact
- marks a conditional event that did not
take place.
- takes two arguments
- consequence (main clause) and contrary-to-fact-conditional
(embedded).

Course outline.322
Keywords



Keywords
Course Outline 322