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Is the conditional an indicative tense?Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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#2
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The indicative is a mood.
The imperative is a mood. The subjunctive is a mood. The conditional is classified as a tense and, therefore, gets lumped in with the other indicative mood tenses. The conditional tense is also know as the 'hypothetical future tense'. |
#4
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RAE groups the conditional with the other tenses of the indicative mood, as you can see here.
The names that RAE uses for the conditional (condicional, pos-pretérito) perhaps give us a clue about their reasoning: the conditional tense describes a future event from the perspective of a specific past moment in the same way that the future tense describes a future event from the perspective of "now". Both the future and the conditional have other uses besides describing a future event from the perspective of a particular moment in time: this seems to affect how confident we feel about the classification of the conditional as a tense of the indicative mood, and I feel that this also contributes to the popularity of other systems of organizing Spanish verb forms. |
#5
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Thank you all for your replies.
Quote: Originally Posted by Rusty ![]() The indicative is a mood. The imperative is a mood. The subjunctive is a mood. The conditional is classified as a tense and, therefore, gets lumped in with the other indicative mood tenses. The conditional tense is also know as the 'hypothetical future tense'. That makes sense I guess. Forgive me if my thread title was badly worded. I did mean to ask if the conditional was a tense of the indicative mood, not that the indicative is itself a tense. (for any lurking readers) Quote: Originally Posted by aleCcowaN That's right, but until some 50 years ago it was considered to be the potential or conditional mood. Quote: Originally Posted by wrholt ![]() Both the future and the conditional have other uses besides describing a future event from the perspective of a particular moment in time: this seems to affect how confident we feel about the classification of the conditional as a tense of the indicative mood, and I feel that this also contributes to the popularity of other systems of organizing Spanish verb forms. Neat insights; this clears up a lot. I have seen a few textbook references separate the conditional from the indicative tenses, as if it were its own mood. However, grouping them altogether seems to be more popular — more so given that the RAE gives an authoritative decision on the matter. Also, I recently found that the Spanish-version Wikipedia does have an article on the conditional, reading: Quote: "El modo condicional es uno de los modos del verbo en algunas lenguas romances y germánicas. Otro nombre alternativo es el de modo potencial porque en ocasiones se refiere a acciones hipotéticas o posibles. Frecuentemente se considera que el condicional es simplemente un tiempo verbal y no un modo independiente." Last edited by AngelicaDeAlquezar; September 19, 2014 at 10:47 AM. Reason: Merged back-to-back posts. |
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