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Standards: Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking. Form and use verbs in the indicative,

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Presentation on theme: "Standards: Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking. Form and use verbs in the indicative,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Standards: Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking. Form and use verbs in the indicative, imperative, interrogative, conditional, and subjunctive mood.

2 Essential Questions What is verb mood?
How can I identify shifts in verb mood and voice?

3 Verb Mood Mood is the attitude a verb conveys in a sentence. Changing the verb’s mood will change the tone of the sentence. Verb moods indicate a state of being or reality.

4 Indicative Mood The indicative mood indicates a state of factuality and reality. Ex: "A cat sits on the stove." Most sentences in English are in the indicative mood. It simply states a fact of some sort, or describes what happens, or gives details about reality.

5 Imperative Mood The imperative mood indicates a state of command.
Ex: "Give me back my money." One marker of the imperative is that frequently the subject does not appear in the sentence, but is only implied: "(You) Give me back my money."

6 Interrogative Mood The interrogative mood indicates a state of questioning. Ex: "Will you leave me alone now?" One marker of the interrogative is that frequently the speaker inverts or switches the subject-verb order by placing the helping verb first, before the subject: "Will you leave me alone?" instead of "You will leave me alone." Frequently the interrogative appears with requests for a course of action or requests for information.

7 Conditional Mood The conditional mood indicates a conditional state that will cause something else to happen. Ex: The bomb might explode. The conditional is marked by the words might, may, could, and would. Frequently, a phrase in the conditional appears closely linked to a phrase in the subjunctive preceded by a subordinate conjunction like if.

8 Subjunctive Mood The subjunctive mood indicates a hypothetical state, a state contrary to reality, such as a wish, a desire, or an imaginary situation. Ex: If you jiggle that switch, the bomb might explode. Note that the 2nd clause is conditional, the 1st is subjunctive.

9 Mood Example Indicative She is happy. Imperative Smile! (Note: The subject “you” is implied rather than stated.) Interrogative Is she happy? (Note: the subject follows the verb.) Conditional She could be happy. Subjunctive If she won the lottery, she would be happy.


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