Examples of imperative mood in the following topics:
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- In English, there are many grammatical moods, but by far the most common are the indicative, the imperative, the subjunctive, and the conditional.
- In English, mood is a little different.
- The imperative mood expresses direct commands, prohibitions, and requests.
- In the imperative mood, the subject is almost always implied to be "you."
- [Main clause "I wish" is factual and in indicative mood; dependent clause "Paul would eat" is hypothetical and in subjunctive mood.]
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- All verbs have tense, aspect, and mood, of which there is a wide variety of combinations.
- Verb mood is to the "attitude" of the verb.
- Mood can be expressed in any verb tense.
- The three main moods used in English are indicative, subjunctive, imperative.
- The subjunctive mood is for hypothetical situations, emotions, or making requests.
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- Emotions and mood can affect temperament, personality, disposition, and motivation.
- Emotions and mood can cloud judgment and reduce rationality in decision-making.
- All moods can affect judgment, perception, and physical and emotional well-being.
- In contrast, a positive mood can enhance creativity and problem solving.
- Job satisfaction can affect a person's mood and emotional state.
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- Mood disorders are psychological disorders characterized by dysfunctional moods, including depression, bipolar, dysthymia, and cyclothymia.
- Mood disorders (also called affective disorders) characterize a group of psychological disorders where disturbance in the person's mood is thought to be the main underlying feature.
- While everyone experiences negative mood at some point in their lives, mood disorders affect an individual's capacity to function in daily life.
- Usually, moods are normal in between the "highs" and "lows".
- Mood disorders may also be an evolutionary adaptation: a low or depressed mood can increase an individual's ability to cope with situations in which the effort to pursue a major goal could result in danger, loss, or wasted effort.
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- Periods are used at the
end of declarative or imperative sentences.
- Recall that declarative sentences
make statements and imperative sentences give commands.
- (imperative sentence)
- (declarative sentence containing an imperative
statement)
- A sentence ending in an
exclamation mark may be an exclamation, an imperative, or may indicate
astonishment.
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- Bipolar disorders are debilitating mood disorders characterized by periods of mania/hypomania and periods of depression.
- Bipolar disorder (commonly referred to as manic-depression) is a mood disorder characterized by periods of elevated mood and periods of depression.
- A psychiatric mood disorder in children, it is characterized by persistently irritable or angry mood with recurrent, severe temper outbursts.
- These neurotransmitters are important regulators of the bodily functions that are disrupted in mood disorders, including appetite, sex drive, sleep, arousal, and mood.
- Bipolar disorder is often treated with mood-stabilizing medications and psychotherapy.
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- Clinical depression is characterized by pervasive and persistent low mood that is accompanied by low self-esteem and a loss of interest.
- Major depressive disorder (also called major depression and clinical depression) is a mood disorder characterized by a pervasive and persistent low mood that is accompanied by low self-esteem and by a loss of interest or pleasure in normally enjoyable activities.
- One of the symptoms must either be a depressed mood or an inability to experience pleasure in activities that were formerly enjoyed.
- Antidepressants (usually SSRIs) have been shown to cause significant improvement in the mood of those with very severe depression.
- Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD) is a psychiatric disorder in children, characterized by persistently irritable or angry mood with recurrent, severe temper outbursts.
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- A person who must choose between competing moral imperatives faces an ethical dilemma.
- Discuss the innate contradictions that often arise in an ethical dilemma, where two or more different moral imperatives conflict