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The subjunctive is a verb form used to express various unreal or hypothetical situations, wishes, recommendations, doubts, or demands. It is often used in the dependent clause of a sentence, following certain expressions or verbs that indicate doubt, necessity, or emotion. In English, the subjunctive is typically formed by using the base form of the verb or by adding "were" instead of "was" for singular subjects.
To form the imperative in French for regular verbs, you generally use the present tense tu form without the subject pronoun. For example, for the verb "parler" (to speak), in the imperative form it would be "parle" (speak). For irregular verbs, there are specific forms that need to be memorized.
To form the past participle in English, you typically add "-ed" to regular verbs (e.g., walked, talked) and follow irregular patterns for irregular verbs (e.g., eaten, written). It is used in various tenses like present perfect and past perfect.
The structure "if he be" or "if she do" is not commonly used in modern English. Instead, it is more appropriate to use "if he is" and "if she does" for present tense verb forms. This follows the standard subject + verb structure in English grammar.
A German word meaning "living space", the term "lebensraum" would most properly be italicized or placed in quotation marks when used in an English sentence. Thus, just one example-sentence would be the following: "In 1941, in pursuit of the 'lebensraum' which they eyed covetously to the east, the Germans invaded the Soviet Union."
Here is the conjugation of the Portuguese verb 'perder'. The form of the infinitive is perder, which means 'to lose' in English. The form of the gerund is perdendo, which means 'losing'. The form of the participle is perdido, which means 'lost'. The present indicative is the following: eu perco; tu perdes; ela/ele/voce perde; nos perdemos; vos perdeis; elas/eles/voces perdem. The past indicative is the following: eu perdi; tu perdeste; ela/ele/voce perdeu; nos perdemos; vos perdestes; elas/eles/voces perderam. The imperfect indicative is the following: eu perdia; tu perdias; ela/ele/voce perdia; nos perdiamos; vos perdieis; elas/eles/voces perdiam. The pluperfect indicative is the following: eu perdera; tu perderas; ela/ele/voce perdera; nos perderamos; vos perdereis; elas/eles/voces perderam. The future indicative is the following: eu perderei; tu perderas; ela/ele/voce perdera; nos perderemos; vos perdereis; elas/eles/voces perderao. The future perfect indicative is the following: eu perderia; tu perderias; ela/elle/voce perderia; nos perderiamos; vos perderieis; elas/eles/voces perderiam. The present subjunctive is the following: eu perca; tu percas; ela/ele/voce perca; nos percamos; vos percais; elas/eles/voces percam. The imperfect past subjunctive is the following: eu perdesse; tu perdesses; ela/ele/voce perdesse; nos perdessemos; vos perdesseis; elas/eles/voces perdessem.The forms of the personal infinitive are the following: perder eu; perderes tu; perder ela/ele/voce; perdermos nos; perderdes vos; elas/eles/voces perderem. The forms of the imperative are the following: perde tu; perca ela/ele/voce; percamos nos; perdei vos; and percam elas/eles/voces. The forms of the negative imperative are the following: nao percas tu; nao perca ela/ele/voce; nao percamos nos; nao percais vos; nao percam elas/eles/voces.
indicative
The future tense is one of the easiest in Spanish; you can alsosee the "IR + A + INFINITIVE" type phrases in Spanish. This is translated into English as "I am going to (do something)."However, if you wish to say something more akin to "I will..." in English the formula is as follows:With the future of indicative you will add the following endings:Yo - réTú - rásÉl, usted, ella.- ráNosotros. - remosVosotros. - réisEllos, ustedes, ellas. - ránBut be careful because this sort of future is irregular:decirdiré, dirás, dirá, diremos, diréis, dirán.venirvendré, vendrás, vendrá, vendremos, vendréis, vendrán.tenertendré, tendrás, tendrá, tendremos, tendréis, tendránand so forth...Ex.:Querer. Si no le avisas, después no querrá venir. IF you don't advise him, he will not want to come later.Hablar. Hablaré contigo mañana. I will talk with you tomorrow.Comer. Ella comerá luego. She will eat later.
"The Raven" should be italicized when typed or printed as a title, following standard formatting guidelines for book or poem titles. If handwriting, underlining can be used instead of italics.
Following the model "Novel = underlined/italicized Short story = quotation marks," short films require quotation marks.
Imperative sentences are used for issuing commands or orders."She steals a base" is a declarative sentence--it simply states a fact. The following is an example of an imperative sentence:Steal a base!
To swim the English Channel was Brent's cherished dream.
To the degree you want to fit into a society, following its ethics is an imperative. Ethics are rules for living that are agreed on by the members of a society, such as a country, a religion, or a political group.
It depends on the style guide you are following. In general, it is common to italicize the names of churches in written text.
In the following sentence, which word is an adverb used to modify a verb? The young girl quickly learned the rules of the board game.
Ballare is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to dance." There are two imperfect tenses in Italian, one in the indicative and the other in the subjunctive. Following is the conjugation of ballare in both imperfect tenses:IndicativeIo ballavoTu ballaviLui/lei/Lei ballavaNoi ballavamoVoi ballavateLoro/loro/essi ballavanoSubjunctiveIo ballassiTu ballassiLui/lei/Lei ballasseNoi ballassimoVoi ballasteLoro/loro/essi ballassero
The subjunctive is a verb form used to express various unreal or hypothetical situations, wishes, recommendations, doubts, or demands. It is often used in the dependent clause of a sentence, following certain expressions or verbs that indicate doubt, necessity, or emotion. In English, the subjunctive is typically formed by using the base form of the verb or by adding "were" instead of "was" for singular subjects.