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Jigneshbharati Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Be

Be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total.

I saw the above in Facebook.


Is "be" a subjunctive or a command- an imperative sentence with "you" as an implied subject?

How do we differentiate the use of "be" in both types- imperative or command and subjunctive?

  

Top answer

Be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total. It's an imperative construction. The two major differences between imperatives and subjunctives are that the latter are normally subordinate clauses, whereas imperatives are main clauses, and imperatives normally have the subject omitted but understood as "you", whereas subjunctives have an overt subject: It is important [that you be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total].

  • Be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total.
  • It's an imperative construction.
  • The two major differences between imperatives and subjunctives are that the latter are normally subordinate clauses, whereas imperatives are main clauses, and imperatives normally have the subject omitted but understood as "you", whereas subjunctives have an overt subject: It is important [that you be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total].
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1 Answers
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Be totally ready for a tight squeeze with a healthier mouth thanks to Colgate Total.

It's an imperative construction.

The two major differences between imperatives and subjunctives are that the latter are normally subordinate clauses, whereas imperatives are main clauses, and imperatives normally have the subject omitted but understood as "you", whereas subjunctives have an

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