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Optative mood

The optative mood (/ˈɒptətɪv/ or /ɒpˈttɪv/;[1] abbreviated OPT) is a grammatical mood that indicates a wish or hope regarding a given action. It is a superset of the cohortative mood and is closely related to the subjunctive mood but is distinct from the desiderative mood. English has no morphological optative, but various constructions impute an optative meaning. Examples of languages with a morphological optative mood are Ancient Greek, Albanian, Armenian, Georgian, Friulian, Kazakh, Kurdish, Navajo, Old Prussian, Old Persian, Sanskrit, Turkish, and Yup'ik.[2]

English

Although English has no morphological optative, analogous constructions impute an optative meaning, including the use of certain modal verbs:

  • May you have a long life!
  • Would that I were younger.

Periphrastic constructions include if only together with a subjunctive complement:

  • If only I were rich!
  • I would sing if only I weren't tone deaf.

The optative mood can also be expressed elliptically:

  • (May) God save the Queen!
  • (May you) Have a nice day.
  • (May) God bless America.

The cohortative verb phrases let's (or let us) represent a syntactical mood as a subset of the optative mood:

  • Let's try it.
  • Let us pray.

Indo-European languages

Proto-Indo-European

The optative is one of the four original moods of Proto-Indo-European (the other three being the indicative mood, the subjunctive mood, and the imperative mood). However, many Indo-European languages lost the inherited optative, either as a formal category, or functional, i.e. merged it with the subjunctive, or even replaced the subjunctive with optative.

Albanian

In Albanian, the optative (mënyra dëshirore, lit. "wishing mood") expresses wishes, and is also used in curses and swearing.

  • Wish: U bëfsh 100 vjeç! (May you reach/live 100 years)
  • Curse: Të marrtë djalli! (May the devil take you)

Ancient Greek

In Ancient Greek, the optative is used to express wishes and potentiality in independent clauses (but also has other functions, such as contrary-to-fact expressions in the present[3]). In dependent clauses (purpose, temporal, conditional, and indirect speech), the optative is often used under past-tense main verbs. The optative expressing a wish is on its own or preceded by the particle εἴθε (eithe). The optative expressing potentiality is always accompanied by the untranslatable particle ἄν in an independent clause and is on its own in a dependent clause.

Εἴθε

Eíthe

βάλλοις

bállois

Εἴθε βάλλοις

Eíthe bállois

"If only you would throw."

Χαίροιμι

Khaíroimi

ἄν,

án,

εἰ

ei

πορεύοισθε

poreúoisthe

Χαίροιμι ἄν, εἰ πορεύοισθε

Khaíroimi án, ei poreúoisthe

"I would be glad, if you could travel."

In Koine Greek, the optative began to be replaced by the subjunctive; in the New Testament, it was primarily used in set phrases.

Its endings are characterized by a diphthong such as οι (oi) in thematic verbs and ι in athematic verbs.

Germanic languages

Some Germanic verb forms often known as subjunctives are actually descendants of the Proto-Indo-European optative. The Gothic present subjunctive nimai "may he take!" may be compared to Ancient Greek present optative φέροι "may he bear!"[4] That the old Indo-European optative is represented by the subjunctive is clear in Gothic, which lost the old, "true" Indo-European subjunctive that represented a fixed desire and intent. Its function was adopted by the present form of the optative that reflected only possibilities, unreal things and general wishes at first.

A Germanic innovation of form and functionality was the past tense of the optative, which reflected the irrealis of past and future. This is shown by evidence in the Gothic language, Old High German, Old English, and Old Norse. This use of the (new) optative past tense as an irrealis mood started apparently after the Proto-Germanic past tense that had been once the perfect tense supplanted the Indo-German aorist (compare Euler 2009:184).

A somewhat archaic Dutch saying, 'Leve de Koning' ("long live the king") is another example of how the optative still is present in Germanic languages today.

Latin

Likewise in Latin, the newer subjunctive is based on the Indo-European optative. With this change in Latin, several old subjunctive forms became future forms. Accordingly, the prohibitive (negative desire and prohibition) was formed with the combination of *ne + verb form in the optative present.

Romanian

In Romanian, the conditional and optative moods have identical forms, thus being commonly referred to as the optative-conditional mood.

Sanskrit

In Sanskrit, the optative is formed by adding the secondary endings to the verb stem. It sometimes expresses wishes, requests and commands: bhares "may you bear" (active voice) and bharethās "may you bear [for yourself]" (middle). It also expresses possibilities (e.g. kadācid goṣabdena budhyeta "he might perhaps wake up due to the bellowing of cows")[5] or doubt and uncertainty (e.g., katham vidyām Nalam "how would I be able to recognize Nala?"). The optative is sometimes used instead of a conditional mood.

Basque

Zuberoan dialect has a special mood, called Botiboa (Votive), and unknown to the other dialects, used for making wishes. The auxiliary verb, whose characteristic is the prefix ai-, always precedes the main verb and, in negative wishes, also the negative adverb ez (meaning no, not):

  • Ailü ikusi! ('If she/he had only seen it/him/her!').
  • Ailü ez ikusi! ('If he/she hadn't only seen her/him/it!').

In Standard Basque, like in all the other dialects, such wishes are made with the particle ahal, and the future indicative tense:

  • Arazoa ikusiko ahal du! ('I wish he/she saw the problem').
  • Ez ahal du ikusiko! ('I hope she/he will not see her/him/it'): in negative wishes, the particle ahal goes between the negative adverb ez and the verbal auxiliary.

All the dialects have verbal forms in the imperative mood (Agintera), even for commands concerning the 3rd person, both singular and plural:

  • Liburua ikus beza! ('May he/she see the book!').
  • Liburuak ikus bitzate! ('May they see the books!').

For commands concerning the 1st person, present subjunctive forms are used:

  • Liburua ikus dezadan! ('Let me see the book! —it is not asking any listener for permission to see that book, but a personal wish').
  • Liburuak ikus ditzagun! ('Let's see the books!').

Finnish

In Finnish, the optative or the second imperative, is archaic, mainly appearing in poetry, and used in suppletion with the first imperative. It is formed using the suffixes -ko- and -kö-, depending on vowel harmony, whereas the first imperative uses the suffixes -ka- and -kä-, both cases subjected to consonant gradation; for instance, kävellös (thou shalt walk) is the active voice second person singular in present optative of the verb kävellä (to walk), and ällös kävele is the negative (don’t walk). (The corresponding first imperative forms are kävele and älä kävele.)[6]

Altogether there can be constructed 28 verb inflections in the optative, complete with active and passive voice, present and perfect, three person forms both in singular and plural and a formal plural form. Most, if not all, of these forms are, however, utterly rare and are not familiar to non-professionals. Only some expressions have remained in day-to-day speech; for instance, one can be heard to say ollos hyvä instead of ole hyvä ("you're welcome" or "here you go"). This form carries an exaggerated, jocular connotation.

Optative formality can be expressed with the 1st and the 2nd imperative. For example, the ninth Article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights begins with Älköön ketään pidätettäkö mielivaltaisesti, "Not anyone shall be arrested arbitrarily", where älköön pidätettäkö "shall not be arrested" is the imperative of ei pidätetä "is not arrested". (Also, using the conditional mood -isi- in conjunction with the clitic -pa yields an optative meaning, e.g. olisinpa "if I only were". Here, it is evident that the wish is not, and probably will not be, fulfilled.)

Japanese

The Japanese optative is formed by using a conditional such as ba (-ば) or tara (-たら). For example, "I wish there were more time" is expressed literally as "If there were time, it would be good." (時間があれば良いのに Jikan ga areba ii noni.), where aru, the verb expressing existence, is in the ba conditional form areba. Ii is the present tense of "good," but if expressed in the past tense yokatta よかった, the sentence expresses regret instead of a wish or hope. The above example would become "If there had been time, it would have been good" 時間があればよかったのに, as might be said of an opportunity missed because of a lack of time.

The optative mood can also be expressed by suffixing 様に yō ni to the verb, typically the polite form. For instance, "may you have a pleasant trip" 楽しい旅になります様に.

Mongolian

The Mongolian optative or "wishing form" (Хүсэх Хэлбэр) is used largely to "tell another person about a wish not connected to the listener".[7] Colloquially, however, it can also be used for a wishful second person imperative. It is formed by joining the suffix -аасай/-ээсэй/-оосой to the root stem of the verb. e.g. Үзэх= to see. үз—ээсэй.

Миний

Minii

дүнг

düng

ээж

eej

үзээсэй

üzeesei.

Миний дүнг ээж үзээсэй

Minii düng eej üzeesei.

"If only mum could see my results."

It can also be used to form wishes in the past tense.

Чи

Chi

ирсэн

irsen

баиж

baij

ч

ch

болоосой

boloosoi.

Чи ирсэн баиж ч болоосой

Chi irsen baij ch boloosoi.

"If only you had come."

Sumerian

In Sumerian, the optative of the 1st person is formed differently from the other persons:

Person Designation Example (Sumerian) Translation
1. Cohortative/hortative ga-na-b-dug I want to say it to him/her
2./3. Precative ḫe-mu-ù-zu You should experience it

Thereby, take note that the "normal" indicator of the 1st person in the cohortative (would be a suffix -en) is mostly omitted, as with the cohortative prefix, the 1st person is already expressed. In the case of the precative, the personal indicator has to be used to differentiate between the 2nd and 3rd person.

Turkish

The optative in Turkish is part of the wish mood (dilek kipi) which reflects the command, desire, necessity, or wish. It has several semantic nuances. For instance, the word for "to come" (infinitive: gelmek) is modified in the optative to geleyim. This creates also a one-word sentence and means according to the context

  • I may come.
  • I come (sometime).
  • I want to come (sometime).
  • I should (sometime) come.

Desire mood

Takes the -a or -e suffix.

geleyim, kalasınız
may [I] come, may [you] stay

Wish-conditional mood

It takes the -sa or -se suffix. The following example reflect a wish:

gelse, kalsanız
if [he/she/it] would come, if [you] would stay

See also

References

  1. ^ Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary (1972 ed.)
  2. ^ "OPTATIVE - Definition and synonyms of optative in the English dictionary". educalingo.com. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  3. ^ Cunliffe, A lexicon of the Homeric dialect, expanded edition, p. 438
  4. ^ Joseph Wright. Grammar of the Gothic language. page 137, paragraph 288: derivation of present subjunctive.
  5. ^ Gonda, J., 1966. A concise elementary grammar of the Sanskrit language with exercises, reading selections, and a glossary. Leiden, E.J. Brill.
  6. ^ Penttilä, Aarni (1963). Suomen kielioppi. Helsinki: WSOY. pp. 234–236.
  7. ^ A Texbook of The Mongolian language, 2002:142, Ulaanbaatar, National University of Mongolia.

optative, mood, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, opt. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The optative mood ˈ ɒ p t e t ɪ v or ɒ p ˈ t eɪ t ɪ v 1 abbreviated OPT is a grammatical mood that indicates a wish or hope regarding a given action It is a superset of the cohortative mood and is closely related to the subjunctive mood but is distinct from the desiderative mood English has no morphological optative but various constructions impute an optative meaning Examples of languages with a morphological optative mood are Ancient Greek Albanian Armenian Georgian Friulian Kazakh Kurdish Navajo Old Prussian Old Persian Sanskrit Turkish and Yup ik 2 Contents 1 English 2 Indo European languages 2 1 Proto Indo European 2 2 Albanian 2 3 Ancient Greek 2 4 Germanic languages 2 5 Latin 2 6 Romanian 2 7 Sanskrit 3 Basque 4 Finnish 5 Japanese 6 Mongolian 7 Sumerian 8 Turkish 8 1 Desire mood 8 2 Wish conditional mood 9 See also 10 ReferencesEnglish EditAlthough English has no morphological optative analogous constructions impute an optative meaning including the use of certain modal verbs May you have a long life Would that I were younger Periphrastic constructions include if only together with a subjunctive complement If only I were rich I would sing if only I weren t tone deaf The optative mood can also be expressed elliptically May God save the Queen May you Have a nice day May God bless America The cohortative verb phrases let s or let us represent a syntactical mood as a subset of the optative mood Let s try it Let us pray Indo European languages EditProto Indo European Edit The optative is one of the four original moods of Proto Indo European the other three being the indicative mood the subjunctive mood and the imperative mood However many Indo European languages lost the inherited optative either as a formal category or functional i e merged it with the subjunctive or even replaced the subjunctive with optative Albanian Edit In Albanian the optative menyra deshirore lit wishing mood expresses wishes and is also used in curses and swearing Wish U befsh 100 vjec May you reach live 100 years Curse Te marrte djalli May the devil take you Ancient Greek Edit Main article Optative Ancient Greek In Ancient Greek the optative is used to express wishes and potentiality in independent clauses but also has other functions such as contrary to fact expressions in the present 3 In dependent clauses purpose temporal conditional and indirect speech the optative is often used under past tense main verbs The optative expressing a wish is on its own or preceded by the particle eἴ8e eithe The optative expressing potentiality is always accompanied by the untranslatable particle ἄn in an independent clause and is on its own in a dependent clause Eἴ8eEitheballoisballoisEἴ8e balloisEithe ballois If only you would throw XairoimiKhairoimiἄn an eἰeiporeyois8eporeuoistheXairoimi ἄn eἰ poreyois8eKhairoimi an ei poreuoisthe I would be glad if you could travel In Koine Greek the optative began to be replaced by the subjunctive in the New Testament it was primarily used in set phrases Its endings are characterized by a diphthong such as oi oi in thematic verbs and i in athematic verbs Germanic languages Edit Some Germanic verb forms often known as subjunctives are actually descendants of the Proto Indo European optative The Gothic present subjunctive nimai may he take may be compared to Ancient Greek present optative feroi may he bear 4 That the old Indo European optative is represented by the subjunctive is clear in Gothic which lost the old true Indo European subjunctive that represented a fixed desire and intent Its function was adopted by the present form of the optative that reflected only possibilities unreal things and general wishes at first A Germanic innovation of form and functionality was the past tense of the optative which reflected the irrealis of past and future This is shown by evidence in the Gothic language Old High German Old English and Old Norse This use of the new optative past tense as an irrealis mood started apparently after the Proto Germanic past tense that had been once the perfect tense supplanted the Indo German aorist compare Euler 2009 184 A somewhat archaic Dutch saying Leve de Koning long live the king is another example of how the optative still is present in Germanic languages today Latin Edit Likewise in Latin the newer subjunctive is based on the Indo European optative With this change in Latin several old subjunctive forms became future forms Accordingly the prohibitive negative desire and prohibition was formed with the combination of ne verb form in the optative present Romanian Edit In Romanian the conditional and optative moods have identical forms thus being commonly referred to as the optative conditional mood Sanskrit Edit In Sanskrit the optative is formed by adding the secondary endings to the verb stem It sometimes expresses wishes requests and commands bhares may you bear active voice and bharethas may you bear for yourself middle It also expresses possibilities e g kadacid goṣabdena budhyeta he might perhaps wake up due to the bellowing of cows 5 or doubt and uncertainty e g katham vidyam Nalam how would I be able to recognize Nala The optative is sometimes used instead of a conditional mood Basque EditZuberoan dialect has a special mood called Botiboa Votive and unknown to the other dialects used for making wishes The auxiliary verb whose characteristic is the prefix ai always precedes the main verb and in negative wishes also the negative adverb ez meaning no not Ailu ikusi If she he had only seen it him her Ailu ez ikusi If he she hadn t only seen her him it In Standard Basque like in all the other dialects such wishes are made with the particle ahal and the future indicative tense Arazoa ikusiko ahal du I wish he she saw the problem Ez ahal du ikusiko I hope she he will not see her him it in negative wishes the particle ahal goes between the negative adverb ez and the verbal auxiliary All the dialects have verbal forms in the imperative mood Agintera even for commands concerning the 3rd person both singular and plural Liburua ikus beza May he she see the book Liburuak ikus bitzate May they see the books For commands concerning the 1st person present subjunctive forms are used Liburua ikus dezadan Let me see the book it is not asking any listener for permission to see that book but a personal wish Liburuak ikus ditzagun Let s see the books Finnish EditIn Finnish the optative or the second imperative is archaic mainly appearing in poetry and used in suppletion with the first imperative It is formed using the suffixes ko and ko depending on vowel harmony whereas the first imperative uses the suffixes ka and ka both cases subjected to consonant gradation for instance kavellos thou shalt walk is the active voice second person singular in present optative of the verb kavella to walk and allos kavele is the negative don t walk The corresponding first imperative forms are kavele and ala kavele 6 Altogether there can be constructed 28 verb inflections in the optative complete with active and passive voice present and perfect three person forms both in singular and plural and a formal plural form Most if not all of these forms are however utterly rare and are not familiar to non professionals Only some expressions have remained in day to day speech for instance one can be heard to say ollos hyva instead of ole hyva you re welcome or here you go This form carries an exaggerated jocular connotation Optative formality can be expressed with the 1st and the 2nd imperative For example the ninth Article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights begins with Alkoon ketaan pidatettako mielivaltaisesti Not anyone shall be arrested arbitrarily where alkoon pidatettako shall not be arrested is the imperative of ei pidateta is not arrested Also using the conditional mood isi in conjunction with the clitic pa yields an optative meaning e g olisinpa if I only were Here it is evident that the wish is not and probably will not be fulfilled Japanese EditThe Japanese optative is formed by using a conditional such as ba ば or tara たら For example I wish there were more time is expressed literally as If there were time it would be good 時間があれば良いのに Jikan ga areba ii noni where aru the verb expressing existence is in the ba conditional form areba Ii is the present tense of good but if expressed in the past tense yokatta よかった the sentence expresses regret instead of a wish or hope The above example would become If there had been time it would have been good 時間があればよかったのに as might be said of an opportunity missed because of a lack of time The optative mood can also be expressed by suffixing 様に yō ni to the verb typically the polite form For instance may you have a pleasant trip 楽しい旅になります様に Mongolian EditThe Mongolian optative or wishing form Hүseh Helber is used largely to tell another person about a wish not connected to the listener 7 Colloquially however it can also be used for a wishful second person imperative It is formed by joining the suffix aasaj eesej oosoj to the root stem of the verb e g Үzeh to see үz eesej MinijMiniidүngdungeezheejүzeesejuzeesei Minij dүng eezh үzeesejMinii dung eej uzeesei If only mum could see my results It can also be used to form wishes in the past tense ChiChiirsenirsenbaizhbaijchchboloosojboloosoi Chi irsen baizh ch boloosojChi irsen baij ch boloosoi If only you had come Sumerian EditIn Sumerian the optative of the 1st person is formed differently from the other persons Person Designation Example Sumerian Translation1 Cohortative hortative ga na b dug I want to say it to him her2 3 Precative ḫe mu u zu You should experience itThereby take note that the normal indicator of the 1st person in the cohortative would be a suffix en is mostly omitted as with the cohortative prefix the 1st person is already expressed In the case of the precative the personal indicator has to be used to differentiate between the 2nd and 3rd person Turkish EditThe optative in Turkish is part of the wish mood dilek kipi which reflects the command desire necessity or wish It has several semantic nuances For instance the word for to come infinitive gelmek is modified in the optative to geleyim This creates also a one word sentence and means according to the context I may come I come sometime I want to come sometime I should sometime come Desire mood Edit Takes the a or e suffix geleyim kalasinizmay I come may you stay dd Wish conditional mood Edit It takes the sa or se suffix The following example reflect a wish gelse kalsanizif he she it would come if you would stay dd See also EditPermissive moodReferences Edit Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary 1972 ed OPTATIVE Definition and synonyms of optative in the English dictionary educalingo com Retrieved 2019 03 04 Cunliffe A lexicon of the Homeric dialect expanded edition p 438 Joseph Wright Grammar of the Gothic language page 137 paragraph 288 derivation of present subjunctive Gonda J 1966 A concise elementary grammar of the Sanskrit language with exercises reading selections and a glossary Leiden E J Brill Penttila Aarni 1963 Suomen kielioppi Helsinki WSOY pp 234 236 A Texbook of The Mongolian language 2002 142 Ulaanbaatar National University of Mongolia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Optative mood amp oldid 1090988381, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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