Hence some of our modern grammarians, by the help of a few connectives, absurdly merge a great multitude of Indicative or Potential expressions in what they call the Subjunctive Mood.
It must be observed that the adverbs and conjunctions we have made use of in subjunctive mood, are not characteristic signs of this mood, and very often we speak in subjunctive without them.
Qui, signifying the cause, requires a subjunctive mood, as Stultus es qui Ovidio credas: You are a fool for believing Ovid.
And a conjunction that connects an uncertain proposition with a certain one, may be said to govern a subjunctive mood.
Between certain relative pronouns and those particular conjunctions that govern a subjunctive mood there is also a point of connection.
Wherever the person, or thing, connected with an action, and expressed by a relative is indefinite, there is room for the use of a subjunctive mood.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "subjunctive mood" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.