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For those needing another example…
Indicative mood: "When he walks to the store, he is likely to stop for ice cream on the way back."
Subjunctive mood: "If he walk to the store, he'll likely stop for ice cream on the way back."
[not loaded or deleted]
[not loaded or deleted]
For those needing another example…
Indicative mood: "When he walks to the store, he is likely to stop for ice cream on the way back."
Subjunctive mood: "If he walk to the store, he'll likely stop for ice cream on the way back."
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The question, then, is "cost" versus "costed" (so either way, the user who said "costs" was mistaken). OP's card is in the present tense, subjunctive mood.
Many native English speakers are not taught the subjunctive mood (and when they are, it's often limited to learning the verb "to be"). I remember when I learned the subjunctive mood in Spanish class, our teacher told us (completely incorrectly) that the subjunctive mood doesn't exist in English. In both languages, changing the mood typically changes the verb suffix.