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The desiderative form is used to express an urgent request.
There are three moods: indicative, imperative and desiderative.
The future tense was probably rendered using the subjunctive mood and/or with desiderative verbs.
Hence choice is either desiderative reason or ratiocinative desire, and such an origin of action is a man.
The desiderative particle, k'ah, is used to indicate that the speaker wishes something were true.
Few languages have a distinct desiderative mood; some that do are Sanskrit and Japanese.
The desiderative in Sanskrit may also be used as imminent: mumuurshati "he is about to die".
The desiderative modal expresses desire.
Desiderative forms are often verbs, derived from a more basic verb through a process of morphological derivation.
For example, English generally uses the auxiliary may or let to form desiderative expressions, such as "Let it snow".
Examples are the optative, desiderative and imprecative moods.
Whereas the optative expresses hopes, the desiderative mood expresses wishes and desires.
Proto-Indo-European likely had a desiderative.
Wappo also includes pre-verbal desiderative and optative mood particles.
It has its own form in the present indicative, imperative and desiderative, and in the first preterite indicative.
In Meadow Mari, the desiderative mood is marked by the suffix -не -ne.
Desiderative -iná- ("perhaps")
There is a further distinction within the imperative mood between imperative and hortatory, and within the desiderative mood between intent and desire.
But the earliest passages of the Rigveda show something different: desiderative dudukṣati, aorist dukṣata (for later dhukṣata) and so on.
The periphrastic perfect is used with causative, desiderative, denominative and roots with prosodic long anlauted vowel (except a/ā).
Linguistically, kia kaha consists of the desiderative verbal particle kia, used here as 'an encouragement to achieve the state named', that is, to achieve kaha or strength.
Allative and ablative meanings (i.e. movement to or from) are expressed with these endings; as are the desiderative and a second type of evitave; comitative, proprietive and privative.
The four sections are calculative part, the scientific part on the rational side used for making decisions and the desiderative part and the vegetative part on the irrational side responsible for identifying our needs.
Probably the most common example is the future tense, which exists in many daughter languages but in forms that are not cognate, and tend to reflect either the PIE subjunctive or a PIE desiderative formation.