English to Malay Dictionary indicative

indicative

indikatif
definition
noun
Thus, if a language has long-distance reflexivization with indicatives , then it will necessarily have it with (if relevant) subjunctives, infinitives, small clauses, and NPs.
a verb in the indicative mood.
adjective
having recurrent dreams is not necessarily indicative of any psychological problem
serving as a sign or indication of something.
If a regular pronoun and indicative mood are used, it shows that the speaker asserts that the report is true.
denoting a mood of verbs expressing simple statement of a fact.
example
Popular culture is much more 'indicative' of what people do than what they say they do.
Nothing could be more 'indicative' of how the game has changed.
However, a lot more 'indicative' of such problems was the team's performance in the last three of its matches in the round stage.
Most questions, as well as most statements, are in the 'indicative' mood.
This is not simply to avoid criticisms of judgment speech by translating it from the 'indicative' to the optative.
The 'indicative' is a statement of fact or the proclamation of truth.
Is ‘preserve’ in a poem being discussed an 'indicative' or subjunctive?
And the form is, of course, the first-person singular present active 'indicative' .
The fact that we have kept so many clients for so many years is more 'indicative' of the service we have provided.
Many statistics may be damned lies, but nothing could be more 'indicative' of how rugby has changed than one relating to the opening of Murrayfield in 1925.
Our finishes are not 'indicative' of how the cars ran.
Of all of Hitchcock's films, Rear Window is most 'indicative' of his major obsessions.
The third-person singular 'indicative' ending in Shakespeare's verbs could be either s, as now, or the older th.
Success is articulated not in the 'indicative' but in the subjunctive: potential threats removed; future wars that don't have to be fought.
If a regular pronoun and 'indicative' mood are used, it shows that the speaker asserts that the report is true.
The above rentals are only 'indicative' and subject to review quarterly.
These have also been coded as zero to denote missing data, though strictly speaking their failure to reply is more 'indicative' of the question not being applicable to them.
Hearing strange noises in the night and letting the imagination run wild are quite natural human traits and not very 'indicative' of diabolical or paranormal activity.
One thing to bear in mind is that like any show, the first few episodes aren't very 'indicative' of what is to come.
The use of the French reflexive in the present 'indicative' stresses the innate auto-referentiality of his narrative.
He wants to move the claim from the conditional to the 'indicative' mood, as the grammarians would say.
You understand that if your application is indicatively approved, this approval is not a loan offer but 'indicative' approval only.
Moreover, the shift in grammatical mood from subjunctive to 'indicative' underscores how plausible this vision is.
The New Testament reveals a double indicative into which a double 'indicative' is interwoven.
The conditional was, in like manner, the infinitive plus a shortened form of the past descriptive 'indicative' of haber.
Watching Paul glance over several times at Dan's guitar with a half smile was very 'indicative' of how much Dan can blow everyone away while performing.
The subtitle is more 'indicative' of the contents.
Please look at the 'indicative' criteria carefully before deciding which procedure to choose.
How stupid, how sappy, how very 'indicative' of my age and immaturity.
Now, in the non-standard dialects that have it, this is an 'indicative' past tense.
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