Both Andrea and I have been in filthy moods, and spent the whole day reading rude remarks into everything people say. |
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I still get depressed and I still get into bad moods, but that engulfing sadness is something I haven't experienced in quite the same way since. |
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Depression is a disorder that affects your thoughts, moods, feelings, behavior and physical health. |
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Her bad moods were still affecting all of us, and I had begun to get really worried. |
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Stress is believed to impair one's ability to regulate moods and prevent mild sadness from deepening and persisting. |
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There was nothing that bothered him more than seeing his friends in bad moods, for he knew what it felt like to be in a slump. |
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It can also trigger different thoughts that affect moods of sadness, happiness and anger. |
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Another way in which emotions and moods affect judgement is the well-known relationship between good mood and overconfidence. |
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Painters in turn portrayed the poems, capturing the moods or personality of the characters or themes. |
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Donnan, bless his soul, was still in the most happy, patient of moods, nodded. |
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She has beautifully and brilliantly caught different moods of water in colours black, white and silver. |
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We now understand and value the reverence our ancestors had for Mother Nature in all her moods and seasons. |
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She had bore the brunt of his wild moods, when he had become violent and uncontrollable. |
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That new medication she had received for her moods helped most of the time, but sometimes, it just made her even more indrawn. |
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It was as if everyone in the world had a skip to their step today, and it was contagious, as good moods often are. |
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The director uses a variety of expressionistic techniques to create alternating moods of lyricism and ominous storm clouds. |
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And the unproductive periods do seem to correlate somewhat with gloomier moods. |
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I watched a man struggled with the stubborn engine and the snow on his car, imagining that he wouldn't be in the best of moods. |
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His moods swings were cyclical and he was familiar with the impulse to suicide, as this verse attests. |
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Her moods are many, and she has a faculty for portraying deep emotions with an airy touch. |
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People are extra-sensitive right now to atmosphere, undercurrents, moods and nuances, slights and slurs. |
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There are places where the sand is coarse and hard instead of soft, worn by years of the sea and her moods. |
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This resulted in some labels for groups that reflected participant moods or humor. |
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They live and travel in small groups, communicating and expressing their moods with a variety of hoots, grunts, roars, and screams. |
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That ratio represents what amounts to an emotional set point, the mean around which our daily moods swing. |
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From other interviews I'd seen, I knew Jim could make things difficult for me if he was in one of his ornery moods. |
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Anne, who loved the sea in all of its many moods, looked out at the storm-tossed harbour longingly. |
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Taken internally, St John's wort is used for mild to moderate depressive moods, anxiety, and nervous unrest. |
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Upon such changing moods, and seemingly capricious events, the future spiritual welfare of our nation has depended. |
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It's an amusing idea, that even the harbingers of capitalism are subject to the ever-changing moods of capricious Mother Nature. |
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I tried to get some shots of him but he was in one of his camera-shy moods. |
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Whether they realise it or not, they actually absorb ideas, moods, opinions and even goals from those around them. |
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Certain situations, moods, habits, and memories can all be craving triggers, says psychotherapist Last. |
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As well as affecting the way we judge other people, moods also influence our susceptibility to weak arguments. |
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It got me thinking about the way in which our activities and moods are affected by the weather. |
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I was sure that he would lift people's moods so I decided to design a card, which I sent to family and friends. |
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But Keren to his annoyance had a way of reading his moods and using them to his advantage. |
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He had learned to read her moods and expressions well in the past year since they had married. |
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The Essex girl moves to New York in search of love and the music matches her changing moods as she moves between ecstasy and despair. |
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Just last week, in one of my more reckless moods, I decided to colour my hair blue. |
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Do I give and withhold love according to my moods or is it constant regardless of the ups and downs of life? |
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It's important to learn how to manage your moods so you don't dump on loved ones. |
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Its colours and moods thrill the soul, ever changing in a reassuring regular manner, season after season, without fail. |
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Her mother was in one of her moods and it seemed that everything Betty did dissatisfied her. |
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I knew I was going to be an emotional wreck, judging from how quickly my moods were changing. |
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She had sort of guesstimated from their combined moods, the atmosphere one might call it, that this sort of behavior was to be expected. |
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Some researchers believe that anorexics use the restriction of food to self-medicate painful feelings and distressing moods. |
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No longer can she rewrite history to suit her politician's vanity or her increasingly erratic moods. |
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And the Puli will often show great sensitivity to the human's moods and feelings, actively communicating empathy. |
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Additionally her spirit was being calmed and her moods and concentration were considered within the herbal prescription. |
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In characteristic fashion Heidegger interprets such good moods as a turning away from the burdensome character of being. |
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I had now learned to gauge her emotional moods like a seismologist reads a Richter scale. |
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Jacynthia and Lark's moods had darkened quickly and they sulked while taking notes. |
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By using food to fix our draggy moods and low energy, we're letting our emotions rule our bodies, and we're getting fatter in the bargain. |
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The moon, planet of emotions, is your ruler, making you extremely sensitive to the moods of others. |
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Advice is offered on everything from how to understand space to the creation of atmospheric moods. |
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I stood on the cliff tonight and took it in, arms out in the standard Zorba-the-Czech posture I assume in these moods of surpassing joy. |
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Within the context of modernity, the autonomous artist, as a creative being, explores varying moods, passion, sentiments and emotions. |
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Being encouraged to do something practical made an incalculable difference to my moods. |
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Our intellectual fate is no longer subject to the moods of speculators, in whose thought genius comes dangerously close to mania. |
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The land and its colours, moods, and furies possess the people of Charleville in South West Queensland. |
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I don't know what happened, I guess in the long trek through my ever changing moods we sort of drifted apart. |
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He is hoping to expand on research completed for his PhD, which focussed on seasonality and its impacts on people's moods. |
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The colors and moods combine with the actors' performances and haunting musical cues to create a slightly surreal atmosphere. |
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He was by nature insecure and self-doubting, the victim of depressive moods and bouts of indolence. |
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As for Colin Montgomerie, a 5-5 finish for 69 and an eight-under-par aggregate had the three-time champion in one of his more thunderous moods. |
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Okada projected the mercurial shift of moods in Beethoven's Fantasie Op 77 with resonant sonority. |
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Nor does she depict adolescence as a period of mental instability, characterized by mercurial moods and impulsive, self-gratifying actions. |
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I was in one of my dancing moods and completely forgot his distaste for mustard. |
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Thelwall hopes that in the future sentiment analysis could help computers detect their users' moods so they can react accordingly. |
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The graphics focus on different moods and actions of the toon characters and come in colours such as spiced red and turquoise blue. |
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The isolated tower perched on a rock near Ireland's most southerly point, Mizen Head, has many moods and a long interesting history. |
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The production sounds great and the music is very interesting, with shifting rhythms and moods. |
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Modernist painting was distinctly post-Impressionist, about moods clothed in elaborate forms, not about the play of light. |
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He suffered from an alternation of depressed moods with elevated, expansive or irritable moods. |
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They walked on, the brief exchange causing their moods to drift in contrary directions. |
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Eighteen months later, his black moods returned suddenly and led to his near-suicide attempt just days later. |
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After this incident, Philip seemed friendlier, although he would still have his black moods. |
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For the past ten years, Joanne had suffered from depression and took medication to control her black moods. |
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It's cognitive distortions or faulty thought patterns that often plunge us into black moods. |
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She was in one of her playful, mischievous moods, and that didn't bear well for him. |
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By installing soundproof glass on the upper floor, we have succeeded in creating different sound zones with distinct moods. |
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Her moods were becoming all extremes, with no middle ground. |
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This level-headed man of logic, however, is also a creature of moods and funks. |
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Everyone, without exception, had had a pleasant Xmas and a fine New Year and all and sundry were in moods so dandy it was like Springtime come early. |
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The splicing of vignettes and autobiography evokes moods wonderfully, but in later chapters, not pinned to Rembrandt, argument dissolves under the pressure. |
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Taylor had recently broken off an engagement with the actress Neva Gerber, who complained of his melancholic moods. |
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Pets will pattern their moods after yours, so love what you are doing! |
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There's debate about whether it's a true addiction, but it's definitely bad moods, anxiety, fatigue. |
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The limbic system is responsible for moods, creativity and sexuality. |
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She was regal in a rose-coloured, floral-accented outfit, and took the audience on a journey through moods of despair and pain to the joy of liberation. |
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The pendulum swing between moods and tone, however, became a staple of the shoot. |
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Composers make gorgeous music, and can bang their moods out on a piano. |
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The show coasted on sheer mastery of compas, the rhythmic measure that defines all flamenco, and on the charisma of the artists probing the art's dark and light moods. |
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To blow off those dear friends who've put up with your mercurial moods for long is just plain cruel and thoughtless, so start returning those calls and those emails. |
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The idea is that each person's unique biorhythms, inner shifts and moods can be balanced by using plant extracts, medicinal foods and therapies suited to each internal season. |
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The other students, English majors all, seemed terrified by the prospect of a semester of moods and modals, subordinate clauses and predicate adjectives. |
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We watch strange moods fill our children, and our hearts swell with pain. |
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He, too, could be plagued by the black dog, but somehow those dark moods became curses that brought benefit to his team even while he was in despair. |
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Healthy people remedy bad moods by accessing positive personal memories. |
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Others will view their emotional control as hard and unfeeling, regarding them as unresponsive to their moods and undemonstrative in romantic affairs. |
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I think this is a very difficult question, and I think our moods have swung from time to time, but in the dark moments we felt that he may well have suicided. |
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But at the same time the moods are unfamiliar to that setting and context. |
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When one of these moods overtook her, she became unmanageable. |
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He knew I was in a deep depression, dark moods, and he would spend time with me, trying to give me pep talks. |
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He projected his own violent moods on to the canvas in red and green. |
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What other moods and emotional nuances are portrayed by the rapper actors? |
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The eyes could be either as cold and sparkling as sapphires or as warm and limpid as the deep cerulean of the sea, or even, in certain moods, the misty blue of the mountains. |
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Do you often counter depressive moods by some sort of potentially harmful compulsive behavior such as overworking, overspending, overdrinking, or overeating? |
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What Ellington provided was a rich variety of moods, textures and rhythmic structures laced with emotional coloration that enhanced choreographic expression. |
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This gave Carl a feeling of newly won security which sustained him through his father's irritable moods, his mother's depressive invalidism, and his alienation at school. |
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Usually she could gauge his moods but this was an extreme situation. |
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I pushed myself to attend two hours of scriptwriting and rather than delve deeper into depressive moods, I just walked out of class and back home. |
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The imperative and all the indirect or oblique moods, as well as the desiderative forms and all the tenses, are expressed by means of separate words. |
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The wistful elegiac moods of the Sonnets, were conveyed with just the right balance of outward expression and gesture, and delicate tonal control. |
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Yes, one can hear Shostakovich and Prokofiev, particularly in their most dolefully melodic moods, and I understand that Latvian folk elements have been used as well. |
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The contrasting moods of the five movements were probingly explored, and there was no weak link in the band. |
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The key to invariance is bodily discipline, as in monastic prayer and meditation meant to mold dispositions and moods. |
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Not all tenses and persons are represented in all moods and voices, as some conjugations use auxiliary forms. |
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Tallis provides a rhythmic variety and differentiation of moods depending on the meaning of his texts. |
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She was in one of her naughty, gurglesome moods, and bounced on her chair and waved her hands about in her funniest way. |
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Linguistics also differentiate moods into two parental categories that include deontic mood and epistemic mood. |
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The Doric, Lydian, and Phrygian modes, owing to their combination of basic rhythms, were regarded as able to express various moods. |
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Realis moods are a category of grammatical moods that indicate that something is actually the case or actually not the case. |
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The dramatic tenor of Bashir's composition dreamingly and effortlessly segued with the precarious and exciting tonal moods of Nawazen. |
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He said that it's magical how his car that boasts of the vanity plate DRAWONME lifts folks' moods. |
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Their moods are hardly soothed by the arrival of flamboyant widow Hortensia. |
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I absolutely believe he's a tightwad, that he has black moods and yes, I even believe he slapped his wife. |
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Power pop is a more aggressive form of pop rock that is based on catchy, melodic hooks and energetic moods. |
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Studies show that making time for breakfast leads to better moods, less stress and more successful relationships. |
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South Australia is not for the flashy, wham-bam 'Wallyworld' tourist, rather it's a vast tapestry of many colours and moods. |
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Women studied in China, India and Hong Kong either don't report negative moods premenstrually or don't attribute them to PMS, Ussher said. |
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The usage of the indicative, subjunctive, and jussive moods in Classical Arabic is almost completely controlled by syntactic context. |
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Yearbooks are irreplaceable, because they capture the memories and moods of a unique time. |
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Once enknitted into the stern fibre that ran through all her moods, it sought fields of operation. |
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Gauda Jagor, is an impression of social life, that displays all the existing moods and modes of human characters. |
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Common irrealis moods are the imperative, the conditional, the subjunctive, the optative, the jussive, and the potential. |
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Some examples of moods are indicative, interrogatory, imperative, subjunctive, injunctive, optative, and potential. |
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The perfect in all moods is used as an aspectual marker, conveying the sense of a resultant state. |
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This is confirmed in the daily mood patterns described by smokers, with normal moods during smoking and worsening moods between cigarettes. |
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Turkish verbs conjugate for past, present and future, with a variety of aspects and moods. |
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This is what your boyfriend did, honey. When he was in one of his more obstreperous moods. |
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Commonly encountered moods include the indicative, subjunctive, and conditional. |
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The foregoing list of moods in the imperfect Figures II and III does not contain Baroko or Bokardo. |
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When you're notating music you can control the moods if you want to. |
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Strongly coloured bears of many shapes, sizes and moods play across soft pastel backgrounds scattered with stars, jellybeans, ladybirds, polka dots or flowers. |
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The six verb inflections consist of three tenses and three moods. |
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Blau further discusses person markers, the three moods, infinitival forms and their uses, verbal themes and their inflection, and finally weak roots. |
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Some Germanic languages distinguish between two types of subjunctive moods, for example, the Konjunktiv I and II in German or the present and past subjunctive in English. |
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They are any verb or sentence mood that are not realis moods. |
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Irrealis moods are the set of grammatical moods that indicate that something is not actually the case or a certain situation or action is not known to have happened. |
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For example, the subjunctive and optative moods in Ancient Greek alternate syntactically in many subordinate clauses, depending on the tense of the main verb. |
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Even when two different moods exist in the same language, their respective usages may blur, or may be defined by syntactic rather than semantic criteria. |
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Not all of the moods listed below are clearly conceptually distinct. |
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For details of the uses of these constructions, as well as additional verb forms representing different grammatical moods, see Uses of English verb forms. |
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The volitive moods are the imperative, jussive, and cohortative. |
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For the subjunctive, optative and participle moods there are only a few examples, and it is not quite clear whether they should be interpreted periphrastically. |
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The individual pieces comprise overtures, airs, minuets, gigues, gavottes, and the like, and they represent a fair sampling of Rameau's many varied moods and styles. |
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At the same time, we overread. That is, we find in narratives qualities, motives, moods, ideas, judgments, even events for which there is no direct evidence in the discourse. |
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Our moods and energy levels are said to be the lowest in the afternoons. |
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