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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Jussive mood 6 found (17 total)
alternate case: jussive mood
Ila language
(2,271 words)
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not see", that there is also a subjunctive mood, a conditional mood, a jussive mood and the imperative. Many subjunctive forms end in -e. The root of the
Nias language
(1,882 words)
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to third person, and are employed in what Sundermann (1913) calls "jussive " mood . Ya-mu-'ohe 3SG.JUSS-JUSS-bring (northern dialect) Ya-mu-'ohe 3SG
Esperanto etymology
(3,034 words)
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case suffix -n, the inceptive prefix ek- (from ἐκ ek), and perhaps the jussive mood suffix -u (if that is not Hebrew). Latin and Greek: the suffix -ido (offspring;
Talysh language
(3,348 words)
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by removing the infinitive marker (ē), however the present stem and jussive mood are not so simple in many cases and are irregular. For some verbs, present
Korean grammar
(4,991 words)
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from exclusive first person, and first person from third person, in the jussive mood Korean does not distinguish: singular from plural on the verb (though
Modern Hebrew grammar
(7,628 words)
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Finally, a very small number of fixed expressions include verbs in the jussive mood , which is essentially an extension of the imperative into the third person