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modal relations in linguistics are analysed by the linguists Vinogradov
V.V, Serebrennikov B.A, Yartseva V.N, Barkhudarov L.S.
Grammatical mood differs from grammatical tense and grammatical
aspect, although the same word patterns are used
for expressing more
than one of these meanings at the same time in many languages,
including Engish, most other modern Indo-European languages and
Turkic languages as well. English and Uzbek languages have
indicative
, imperative and subjunctive moods.
The definite form of the mood is used to represent an action as real,
problematic, unreal, or as a request or order. In linguistics the following
terms are used concerning the grammatical category of mood in the
verb: indicative,
interrogative, imperative, subjunctive, injunctive,
optative and potential. These are considered to be expressed in the finite
forms of the verb.
Infinitives, gerunds and participles which are non-
finite forms of the verb don’t have the category of mood, they have the
grammatical categories of tense and voice. Terminology mentioned
above vary from
language to language, for example “the conditional
mood” in one language may largely overlap with that of “the
hypothetical” or “potential mood” in another .
The grammatical category of mood is closely connected with the
categories of tense, person and number of the verb. The speaker’s or
the writer’s mental attitude towards his/her action or to the reality plays
a great role in expressing one or the other form of the mood: Indicative,
Imperative or Subjunctive. The category of mood in English is expressed
both analytically and synthetically. Auxiliary verbs
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