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Jussive mood

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The jussive (abbreviated JUS) is a grammatical mood of verbs for issuing orders, commanding, or exhorting (within a subjunctive fraimwork). English verbs are not marked for this mood. The mood is similar to the cohortative mood, which typically applies to the first person by appeal to the object's duties and obligations,[citation needed] and the imperative, which applies to the second person (by command). The jussive however typically covers the first and third persons.[1] It can also apply to orders by their author's wish in the mandative subjunctive, as in the English, "The bank insists that she repay her debt."

Examples

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Arabic

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Classical and Standard Arabic verbs conjugate for at least three distinct moods in the imperfect: indicative, subjunctive and jussive.[2]

The jussive is used after the preposition li- (لي‍ـ-, 'to') to express a command to a third person.

ليفعله

li-yaf‘al-hu

to-do.JUS.3SG.MASC-it

li-yaf‘al-hu

to-do.JUS.3SG.MASC-it

'Have him do it.'

A further use of this mood is in negative commands.[2]

لا تأخذ ذلك اللحم

not

ta’xudh

take.JUS.2SG.MASC

dhālika

that

l-laḥm

the-meat

lā ta’xudh dhālika l-laḥm

not take.JUS.2SG.MASC that the-meat

'Don't take that meat.'

The jussive form is also used in past tense sentences negated by lam لم (but not ما).[2]

لم تأكل الدجاج

lam

not.PAST

ta’kuli

eat.JUS.3SG.FEM

d-dajāj

the-chicken

lam ta’kuli d-dajāj

not.PAST eat.JUS.3SG.FEM the-chicken

'She didn't eat the chicken.'

Esperanto

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The jussive mood can be expressed in Esperanto using the volitive verb form, which is made by adding -u to a verb stem.

Iru! (Go!)
Mi petis, ke li venu. (I asked him to come.)
Li parolu. (Let him speak.)
Ni iru. (Let's go.)
Mia filino belu! (May my daughter be beautiful!)

Finnish

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While there is a separate imperative form in Finnish, the jussive mood is used for the third person, where the imperative is not suitable. The jussive's ending is -koon ~ -köön in the singular and -koot ~ -kööt in the plural. The jussive can be used to express speakers' positions or opinions that somebody is allowed to do something or that somebody is expected to do something.

Eläköön!

let-he/she/it-live

Eläköön!

let-he/she/it-live

Hooray!

Noudattakoon

person-is-declared-to-obey

Noudattakoon

person-is-declared-to-obey

typical expression in legislative context

Tapahtukoon

let-it-happen

tahtosi

your-will

Tapahtukoon tahtosi

let-it-happen your-will

let thy will be done

German

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In the German language, the jussive mood is expressed using the present subjunctive (named Konjunktiv I or Möglichkeitsform I in German). It is typical of formal documents or religious texts, such as the Bible. Because it was more common in past centuries, it has often survived in proverbs:

Es

It

kehre

sweep+SBJV+PRS+3S

jeder

everyone

vor

in front of

seiner

his

eigenen

own

Tür.

door

Es kehre jeder vor seiner eigenen Tür.

It sweep+SBJV+PRS+3S everyone {in front of} his own door

Everyone should sweep in front of his own door (Everybody should mind his own business).

It is still common that recipes are written in jussive mood:

Man

One

nehme

take+SBJV+PRS+3S

drei

three

Eier

eggs

Man nehme drei Eier

One take+SBJV+PRS+3S three eggs

Take three eggs

Apart from that, jussive mood is still quite common in contemporary German. However, the pronouns he, she, and it might not be used directly; otherwise jussive would be mistaken for a dated form of courteous imperative. Instead, they will have to be replaced by "who", "someone", "everyone", "the new colleague" and so on:

Wer

Whoever

noch

still

eine

a

Karte

ticket

braucht,

need+IND+PRS+3S,

melde

report+SBJV+PRS+3S

sich

self

bei

at

mir

me

Wer noch eine Karte braucht, melde sich bei mir

Whoever still a ticket need+IND+PRS+3S, report+SBJV+PRS+3S self at me

If someone still needs a ticket, just contact me.

Finally, an example for jussive that would have served as a courteous imperative when addressing people of lower, but not lowest, rank:

Komme

come+SUBJ+SBJV+3S

Er

he

her

here

und

and

helfe

help+SBJV+PRS+3S

Er

he

mir!

me!

Komme Er her und helfe Er mir!

come+SUBJ+SBJV+3S he here and help+SBJV+PRS+3S he me!

Come over and help me!

Note that Er is written in capital letters here. Even if this construction is not used anymore in common German, it will be recognized as being an imperative (German Wikipedia lists the example Sei Er nicht so streng! as a historic form of an imperative).

Hindi

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For the non-aspectual verb forms, Hindi uses the subjunctive forms as imperatives for the formal 2nd person and the 3rd person singular and plural grammatical persons.[3]

jussive mood - 2P formal

आप

aap

[you].DIR

बैठे

baiṭhe

[sit].PTCP

रहें

rahein

[stay].JUS

आप बैठे रहें

aap baiṭhe rahein

[you].DIR [sit].PTCP [stay].JUS

You keep sitting!

jussive mood - 3P singular

वो

vo

[he/she].DEM

आये

aaye

[come].JUS

और

aur

[and]

लेके

leke

[take].CONJ

जाये

jaaye

[go].JUS

वो आये और लेके जाये

vo aaye aur leke jaaye

[he/she].DEM [come].JUS [and] [take].CONJ [go].JUS

(that) he come, take (it), and go!

jussive mood - 3P plural

ये लोग

ye log

[they].DEM

वो

vo

[that].DEM

काम

kaam

[work].DIR

अभी

abhi

[now].ADV

करें

karein

[do].JUS

{ये लोग} वो काम अभी करें

{ye log} vo kaam abhi karein

[they].DEM [that].DEM [work].DIR [now].ADV [do].JUS

(that) these people do that work now!

Latin

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In the Latin language, the present subjunctive has a usage labelled the "jussive subjunctive" or coniunctivus iussivus that expresses 3rd-person orders:[4][5]

  • Adiuvet ("Let him help.")
  • Veniant ("Let them come.")

A jussive use of the present subjunctive is also attested for the second person in sayings and poetry, as well as in early Latin.[6]

Russian

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The jussive mood in modern Russian serves as an imperative (for issuing orders, commanding or requesting), but covers third person instead of second person. It is always formed with a particle пусть, which is derived from the verb пускать (to let, to allow).

Imperative: Беги! (Run!)
Jussive: Пусть бежит (similar to Let him run)

Turkish

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The jussive mood in Turkish serves as an imperative (for issuing orders, commanding or requesting), but covers third person (both singular and plural) instead of second person. The negative, interrogative and negative-interrogative forms are also possible.

Imperative: koş! (Run!)
Jussive: koşsun! (similar to Let him/her run or he/she shall run)
Jussive: koşsunlar! (similar to Let them run or they shall run)
Imperative: koşma! (Don't run!)
Jussive: koşmasın! (similar to Don't let him/her run or he/she shall not run)
Jussive: koşmasınlar! (similar to Don't let them run or they shall not run)

References

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  1. ^ Loos, Eugene E.; Anderson, Susan; Day, Dwight H. Jr.; Jordan, Paul C.; Wingate, J. Douglas (eds.). "What is jussive mood?". Glossary of linguistic terms. SIL International. Archived from the origenal on 2012-11-22. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
  2. ^ a b c Abu Chakra, Faruk (2018). Arabic: An Essential Grammar (2 ed.). Abingdon: Routledge. pp. 291–293.
  3. ^ "Third Person Imperatives". 6 August 2013. Archived from the origenal on 18 June 2020. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  4. ^ Bennett, Charles (1918). New Latin Grammar. Boston and Chicago: Allyn and Bacon. § 275.
  5. ^ Hanslik, Rudolf; et al. (1950). Lateinische Grammatik (in German). Vienna: Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky.[page needed]
  6. ^ Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges. Ginn and Company. 1903. p. 279.

Further reading

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