
Imperative mood
Imperative mood: a verb form used to give commands, instructions, or requests.
Turn left.
Clean it up.
Stop!
Pass the ketchup.
The English language recognizes three major grammatical moods. Distinct from the indicative (statement of fact—you washed my car) and subjunctive (suggestion, desire—I wish you would wash my car), the imperative mood famously cuts to the chase, omits the second-person subject entirely, and orders an action: Wash my car.
When I studied technical grammar in college, I was intrigued by the imperative mood. (Also, hello, future band name.) What struck me was how uniquely it subverts interactional pragmatics. No turn-taking, no exchange. In the science of linguistics, the imperative command is one of only a few speech acts that doesn’t elicit a response. What the imperative speaker wants…is action.
So what happens when the addressee doesn’t act? The speaker laid bare her intent, asserted authority, and implied confidence in the addressee's ability and willingness to execute. Where does the interaction go if the addressee doesn’t—or can’t or won’t—act? In the case of inability, the speaker may reassess the addressee’s perceived usefulness. If the inaction was defiance (every parent knows that post-directive Or what? gleam in their toddler’s eye), trust degrades.
In 2026, it’s hard to go an hour without hearing about a new agentic workflow or productivity tool where an agent can act as a personalized assistant, transform vague, plain-text requests to actionable work items, or perform complex, multi-step tasks. The Q1 ‘26 agents’ elevator pitch is that they do. The imperative speaker’s dream interlocutor.
So what happens when the agent doesn’t—or can’t or won’t—do what is most useful?
Pay my subcontractors Friday at 4pm for verified work hours. (An AI agent unable to pay is relegated to a digital time tracker, a 60-year-aged technology, waiting for human intervention.)
Process carrier purchase orders for confirmed deliveries on a rolling Net 30 basis. (Where an agent can’t actually execute the Net 30 transfers, the expense and tool sprawl of a P2P platform looms.)
Charge a 20% non-refundable booking fee when customers schedule a massage. (If the agent can’t directly collect funds, thus begins the spaghetti architecture of integrated platforms and payment-flow complexity.)
Validate this month’s insurance copayments, and invoice patients for the net amount owed. (Without a billing mechanism, the agent’s performance falls flat.)
Until agents can autonomously transact, they’re likely to frustrate the legion of imperative speakers eager to command them for maximal utility. Where an order goes unfulfilled (a literal and figurative syntax error, as it were), the speaker reevaluates the agent’s perceived usefulness. The agent loses credibility. Developers lose interest. The public loses trust.
Without a money movement feature, agent-led work tools risk being shunted to the category of novel, but not very commercially useful, interactional counterparts.
Natural bridges this gap.
Natural is the first agentic payments platform powering frictionless money movement between agents, businesses, and consumers. While agents can currently plan, code, and negotiate, they remain financially halted by legacy banking systems with human-centric design. This reliance on manual intercession kills the speed and autonomy that make AI workflows momentous. Natural eliminates these "human-in-the-loop" friction points by providing a native protocol for agentic transactions across any rail.
As the global economy shifts from human labor to agentic output, Natural provides the infrastructure that turns fragmented agent tasks into fully autonomous businesses. Put simply, Natural’s platform fundamentally unlocks the full potential of the agentic workforce.
Command.
Action.