An Inquiry Into the Use of the Subjunctive Mood in the English of the Elizabethan Period ..

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35.) — You should ha' some now would take 2* 12 . .; this Mr. M. to be a gentleman. (B. J. Ev. M. 1. i.) — Where should they he?
(ibid. 3. 5.) — You might talk softlier, rascal. (B. J. Alch.) — What should be in that. Caesar. (Sh. J. Caes. 1. 2.) („A form of speech now gone out. It was a less blunt and direct way of saying: What is there?. These more subtle and delicate modes of expression by the liise of the subj. for the iad. and of the past for the present have perished in our modern English
...." Craik E. of Sh.) Would & might; This speech would have done decently in a tobacco trader's mouth. (B. J. 3." 5.) Might, could, would: Why this would make a man a man of salt. (Sh. E. L. 4. 6.) Use of the subjunctive mood in subordinate sentences.
A. Substantive sentences.
1. 1. Among this class of sentences the oblique speech partakes most of the nature of principal sentences. Statements are made as being pronounced by a third person who, in that moment, is neither speaking nor spoken to.


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