
doi: 10.1632/456658 , 10.2307/456658
In my former paper, I have shown that the languages of our family commonly studied in our schools and colleges possess a mood that has the power of expressing volition on the one hand, and mere anticipation on the other; and that, in Latin, Romance, and Germanic, this double power was inherited from the distinct mood, called subjunctive, of the parent speech. In the course of the demonstration, I gave illustrations of some of the volitive and anticipatory uses which may clearly be recognized.
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