A Comparative Study of the Imperative Structures in French and English

Section: Research Paper
Published
Jun 24, 2025
Pages
161-170

Abstract

In linguistics, many grammars have the concept of grammaticalmood which describes the relationship of the verb with reality and intent. Many languages express distinctions of mood through morphology, bychanging ( inflecting) the form of the verb ( Warriner,1982:159, Palmer,1988:151 and Crystal, 1991:223)Currently identified moods include: conditional sentences, imperative,injunctive, negative, optative, potential, subjunctive and so on. Infinitive isa category apart from all these finite forms, and so are gerunds andparticiples. It should be noted that not all of the moods listed above are clearlyconceptually distinct and that individual terminology varies from languageto language even when two different moods exist in the same language, their respective usages may be blurred, or may be defined by syntacticrather than semantic criteria. We can determine some commoncharacteristics of the imperative mood found in this kind of structures inFrench and English.

Download this PDF file

Statistics

How to Cite

Othman, sanna, توفیق, Abd-allah, T., & سناء. (2025). A Comparative Study of the Imperative Structures in French and English. Adab Al-Rafidayn, 44(70), 161–170. https://doi.org/10.33899/radab.1970.163389