The conditional mood is formed using the past tense of " zullen ", which is " zou " in the singular and " zouden " in the plural.
32.
The "'conditional mood "'in Russian is formed by adding the particle 1K after the word which marks the supposed subject into a sentence formed like in the past tense.
33.
Many languages have a specialized type of verb form called the conditional mood broadly equivalent in meaning to the English " would ( do something ) " for use in some types of conditional sentence.
34.
In the Romance languages, the conditional form is used primarily in the Romanian ( even though the last is a Romance language ), the conditional mood is used in both the apodosis and the protasis.
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The conditional mood form can also be used for hearsay : " Secondo lui, sarebbe tempo di andare " " According to him, it would be [ is ] time to go ".
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In this sentence the " if " clause is in the pluperfect subjunctive form of the subjunctive mood, and the " then " clause is in the conditional perfect form of the conditional mood.
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Some languages distinguish more than one conditional mood; the East African language Hadza, for example, has a " potential " conditional expressing possibility, and a " veridical " conditional expressing certainty.
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Finally, in some German dialects, not just Swiss, " tu?" is also used as an auxiliary verb in the conditional mood ( " T��tsch das welle ? " = " Would you want that ? " ).
39.
The conditional mood construction uses the conjugated past tense of " zullen " : " Hij zou graag thuis blijven " " He would gladly home to _ stay ", " He would gladly stay home ".
40.
Past tense of the adjectival verbs ( " powinienem byB " " I should have done it " ) and conditional mood ( " zrobiBbym byB " " I would have done it " ) are often wrongly considered pluperfect forms.