irrealis
See also: irreális
English
Etymology
Learned borrowing from New Latin irreālis (“intangible, immaterial”), from Latin in- (“un-: not”) + reālis (“real, material, composed of physical things”), from res (“thing”) + -ālis (“-al: forming adjectives”). Doublet of irreal.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɪɹiˈɑːlɪs/, /ɪɹiˈælɪs/, /ɪˈɹiəlɪs/
- Hyphenation: ir‧real‧is
Adjective
irrealis (not comparable)
Derived terms
See also
- subjunctive (and compare others at irrealis mood § Hyponyms)
Noun
irrealis (plural irrealises)
- (grammar) An irrealis construct.
- 2023, Kasia M. Jaszczolt, Understanding Human Time, page 170:
- […] then it would make sense to view Australian past irrealises as TAM forms combining a modal stative predicate (conveying e.g. a capacity, expectation, or desire state) with a past imperfective content.