Languages use different strategies for expressing counterfactuality. Some have dedicated counterfactual
morphemes, while others recruit morphemes which otherwise express
tense,
aspect,
mood, or a combination thereof. Since the early 2000s, linguists, philosophers of language, and philosophical logicians have intensely studied the nature of this grammatical marking, and it continues to be an active area of study.
Fake tense Description In many languages, counterfactuality is marked by
past tense morphology. Since these uses of the past tense do not convey their typical temporal meaning, they are called
fake past or
fake tense. English is one language which uses fake past to mark counterfactuality, as shown in the following
minimal pair. In the indicative example, the bolded words are present tense forms. In the counterfactual example, both words take their past tense form. This use of the past tense cannot have its ordinary temporal meaning, since it can be used with the adverb "tomorrow" without creating a contradiction.
Palestinian Arabic is another:
Formal analyses In
formal semantics and
philosophical logic, fake past is regarded as a puzzle, since it is not obvious why so many unrelated languages would repurpose a tense
morpheme to mark counterfactuality. Proposed solutions to this puzzle divide into two camps:
past as modal and
past as past. These approaches differ in whether or not they take the past tense's core meaning to be about time. In the
past as modal approach, the
denotation of the past tense is not fundamentally about time. Rather, it is an
underspecified skeleton which can apply either to
modal or temporal content. For instance, the particular past as modal proposal of Iatridou (2000), the past tense's core meaning is what is shown schematically below: • The
topic x is not the contextually-provided
x Depending on how this denotation
composes,
x can be a time interval or a
possible world. When
x is a time, the past tense will convey that the sentence is talking about non-current times, i.e. the past. When
x is a world, it will convey that the sentence is talking about a potentially non-actual possibility. The latter is what allows for a counterfactual meaning. The
past as past approach treats the past tense as having an inherently temporal denotation. On this approach, so-called fake tense is not actually fake. It differs from "real" tense only in how it takes
scope, i.e. which component of the sentence's meaning is shifted to an earlier time. When a sentence has "real" past marking, it discusses something that happened at an earlier time; when a sentence has so-called fake past marking, it discusses possibilities that were
accessible at an earlier time but may no longer be.
Fake aspect Fake aspect often accompanies fake tense in languages that mark aspect. In some languages (e.g.
Modern Greek,
Zulu, and the
Romance languages) this fake aspect is
imperfective. In other languages (e.g.
Palestinian Arabic) it is
perfective. However, in other languages including
Russian and
Polish, counterfactuals can have either perfective or imperfective aspect. Fake imperfective aspect is demonstrated by the two
Modern Greek sentences below. These examples form a
minimal pair, since they are identical except that the first uses past imperfective marking where the second uses past perfective marking. As a result of this morphological difference, the first has a counterfactual meaning, while the second does not. This imperfective marking has been argued to be fake on the grounds that it is compatible with
completive adverbials such as "in one month": In ordinary non-conditional sentences, such adverbials are compatible with perfective aspect but not with imperfective aspect: ==Psychology==