Germanic languages English The
English tense–aspect system has two morphologically distinct tenses,
past and
non-past, the latter of which is also known as the
present-future or, more commonly and less formally, simply the
present. No marker of a distinct future tense exists on the verb itself in English; the futurity of an event may be expressed through the use of the
auxiliary verbs "
will" and "
shall", by a non-past form plus an
adverb, as in "tomorrow we go to New York City", or by some other means. Past is distinguished from non-past, in contrast, with internal modifications of the verb. These two tenses may be modified further for
progressive aspect (also called
continuous aspect), for the
perfect, or for both. These two aspectual forms are also referred to as BE +ING and HAVE +EN, respectively, which avoids what may be unfamiliar terminology. Aspects of the present tense: •
Present simple (not progressive, not perfect): "I eat" •
Present progressive (progressive, not perfect): "I am eating" •
Present perfect (not progressive, perfect): "I have eaten" •
Present perfect progressive (progressive, perfect): "I have been eating" (While many elementary discussions of English grammar classify the present perfect as a past tense, it relates the action to the present time. One cannot say of someone now deceased that they "have eaten" or "have been eating". The present auxiliary implies that they are in some way
present (alive), even when the action denoted is completed (perfect) or partially completed (progressive perfect).) Aspects of the past tense: •
Past simple (not progressive, not perfect): "I ate" •
Past progressive (progressive, not perfect): "I was eating" •
Past perfect (not progressive, perfect): "I had eaten" •
Past perfect progressive (progressive, perfect): "I had been eating" Aspects can also be marked on
non-finite forms of the verb: "(to) be eating" (
infinitive with progressive aspect), "(to) have eaten" (infinitive with perfect aspect), "having eaten" (
present participle or
gerund with perfect aspect), etc. The perfect infinitive can further be governed by
modal verbs to express various meanings, mostly combining modality with past reference: "I should have eaten" etc. In particular, the modals
will and
shall and their subjunctive forms
would and
should are used to combine future or hypothetical reference with aspectual meaning: •
Simple future,
simple conditional: "I will eat", "I would eat" •
Future progressive,
conditional progressive: "I will be eating", "I would be eating" •
Future perfect,
conditional perfect: "I will have eaten", "I would have eaten" •
Future perfect progressive,
conditional perfect progressive: "I will have been eating", "I would have been eating" The uses of the progressive and perfect aspects are quite complex. They may refer to the viewpoint of the speaker: :I was walking down the road when I met Michael Jackson's lawyer. (Speaker viewpoint in middle of action) :I have traveled widely, but I have never been to
Moscow. (Speaker viewpoint at end of action) But they can have other
illocutionary forces or additional modal components: :You are being stupid now. (You are doing it deliberately) :You are not having chocolate with your sausages! (I forbid it) :I am having lunch with Mike tomorrow. (It is decided) English expresses some other aspectual distinctions with other constructions.
Used to + VERB is a past
habitual, as in "I used to go to school," and
going to / gonna + VERB is a
prospective, a future situation highlighting current intention or expectation, as in "I'm going to go to school next year."
African American Vernacular English The aspectual systems of certain dialects of English, such as
African-American Vernacular English (see for example
habitual be), and of
creoles based on English vocabulary, such as
Hawaiian Creole English, are quite different from those of standard English, and often reflect a more elaborate paradigm of aspectual distinctions (often at the expense of tense). The following table, appearing originally in Green (2002) shows the possible aspectual distinctions in AAVE in their prototypical, negative and
stressed/emphatic affirmative forms:
German vernacular and colloquial Although
Standard German does not have aspects, many
Upper German and all
West Central German dialects, and some more vernacular forms of German do make an aspectual distinction which partly corresponds with the English
continuous form: alongside the standard present tense
Ich esse ('I eat') and past
Ich aß ('I ate') there is the form
Ich bin/war am essen/Essen ('I am/was at the eating'; capitalization varies). This is formed by the conjugated auxiliary verb
sein ("to be") followed by the preposition and article
am (=
an dem) and the infinitive, which German uses in many constructions as a verbal noun. In the Tyrolean and other Bavarian regiolect the prefix *da can be found, which form perfective aspects. "I hu's gleant" (Ich habe es gelernt = I learnt it) vs. "I hu's daleant" (*Ich habe es DAlernt = I succeeded in learning).
Dutch In
Dutch (a
West Germanic language), two types of
continuous form are used. Both types are considered Standard Dutch. The first type is very similar to the non-standard German type. It is formed by the conjugated auxiliary verb
zijn ("to be"), followed by
aan het and the
gerund (which in Dutch matches the infinitive). For example: •
Present progressive:
Ik ben aan het werken ("I am working") •
Past progressive:
Ik was aan het werken ("I was working") •
Future progressive:
Ik zal aan het werken zijn ("I will be working") The second type is formed by one of the conjugated auxiliary verbs
liggen ("to lie"),
zitten ("to sit"),
hangen ("to hang"),
staan ("to stand") or
lopen ("to walk"), followed by the preposition
te and the infinitive. The conjugated verbs indicate the stance of the subject performing or undergoing the action. •
Present progressive:
Ik zit te eten ("I am eating [while sitting]"),
De was hangt te drogen ("The laundry is drying [while hanging]") •
Past progressive:
Ik lag te lezen ("I was reading [while lying]"),
Ik stond te kijken ("I was watching [while standing]") •
Future progressive:
Ik zal zitten werken ("I will be working [while sitting]") Sometimes the meaning of the auxiliary verb is diminished to 'being engaged in'. Take for instance these examples: •
De leraar zit steeds te zeggen dat we moeten luisteren ("The teacher keeps telling us to listen") •
Iedereen loopt te beweren dat het goed was ("Everyone keeps on saying that it was good") •
Zit niet zo te zeuren ("Stop whining") In these cases, there is generally an undertone of irritation.
Slavic languages The
Slavic languages make a clear distinction between perfective and imperfective aspects; it was in relation to these languages that the modern concept of aspect originally developed. In Slavic languages, a given verb is, in itself, either perfective or imperfective. Consequently, each language contains many pairs of verbs, corresponding to each other in meaning, except that one expresses perfective aspect and the other imperfective. (This may be considered a form of
lexical aspect.) Perfective verbs are commonly formed from imperfective ones by the addition of a prefix, or else the imperfective verb is formed from the perfective one by modification of the stem or ending.
Suppletion also plays a small role. Perfective verbs cannot generally be used with the meaning of a present tense – their present-tense forms in fact have future reference. An example of such a pair of verbs, from
Polish, is given below: • Infinitive (and
dictionary form):
pisać ("to write", imperfective);
napisać ("to write", perfective) • Present/simple future tense:
pisze ("writes");
napisze ("will write", perfective) • Compound future tense (imperfective only):
będzie pisać ("will write, will be writing") • Past tense:
pisał ("was writing, used to write, wrote", imperfective);
napisał ("wrote", perfective) In at least the East Slavic and West Slavic languages, there is a three-way aspect differentiation for verbs of motion with the determinate imperfective, indeterminate imperfective, and perfective. The two forms of imperfective can be used in all three tenses (past, present, and future), but the perfective can only be used with past and future. The indeterminate imperfective expresses
habitual aspect (or motion in no single direction), while the determinate imperfective expresses
progressive aspect. The difference corresponds closely to that between the English "I (regularly) go to school" and "I am going to school (now)". The three-way difference is given below for the
Russian basic (unprefixed) verbs of motion. When
prefixes are attached to Russian verbs of motion they become more or less normal imperfective/perfective pairs, with the indeterminate imperfective becoming the prefixed imperfective and the determinate imperfective becoming the prefixed perfective. For example, prefix
при- pri- + indeterminate
ходи́ть khodít =
приходи́ть prikhodít (to arrive (on foot), impf.); and prefix
при- pri- + determinate
идти́ idtí =
прийти prijtí (to arrive (on foot), pf.).
Romance languages Modern Romance languages merge the concepts of aspect and tense but consistently distinguish perfective and imperfective aspects in the past tense. This derives directly from the way the
Latin language used to render both aspects and
consecutio temporum.
Italian Italian language example using the verb
mangiare ("to eat"): The
imperfetto/
trapassato prossimo contrasts with the
passato remoto/
trapassato remoto in that
imperfetto renders an imperfective (continuous) past while
passato remoto expresses an aorist (punctual/historical) past. Other aspects in Italian are rendered with other periphrases, like
prospective (
io sto per mangiare "I'm about to eat",
io starò per mangiare "I shall be about to eat"), or
continuous/
progressive (
io sto mangiando "I'm eating",
io starò mangiando "I shall be eating").
Hindi Hindi has three aspects,
habitual aspect,
perfective aspect and the
progressive aspect. Each of these three aspects are formed from their participles. The aspects of Hindi when conjugated into their personal forms can be put into five grammatical moods:
indicative,
presumptive,
subjunctive,
contrafactual, and
imperative. In Hindi, the aspect marker is overtly separated from the tense/mood marker.
Periphrastic Hindi verb forms consist of two elements. The first of these two elements is the aspect marker. The second element (the copula) is the common tense/mood marker.
Finnic languages Finnish and
Estonian, among others, have a grammatical aspect contrast of
telicity between telic and atelic. Telic sentences signal that the intended goal of an action is achieved. Atelic sentences do not signal whether any such goal has been achieved. The aspect is indicated by the
case of the object:
accusative is telic and
partitive is atelic. For example, the (implicit) purpose of shooting is to kill, such that: •
Ammuin karhun -- "I shot the bear (succeeded; it is done)" i.e., "I shot the bear dead". •
Ammuin karhua -- "I shot at the bear" i.e. the bear may have survived. In rare cases corresponding telic and atelic forms can be unrelated by meaning. Derivational suffixes exist for various aspects. Examples: •
-ahta- ("once"), as in
huudahtaa ("to yell once") (used for emotive verbs like "laugh", "smile", "growl", "bark"; is not used for verbs like "shoot", "say", "drink") •
-ele- "repeatedly" as in
ammuskella "to go shooting around" There are derivational suffixes for verbs, which carry
frequentative,
momentane,
causative, and
inchoative aspect meanings. Also, pairs of verbs differing only in
transitivity exist.
Austronesian languages Rapa DIR:directional
Rapa is a French Polynesian language of the island of
Rapa Iti. Verbs in the indigenous Old Rapa occur with a TAM (tense, aspect, or mood) marker which can be followed by directional or
deictic particles. "The primary tense–aspect markers used in Old Rapa are the imperfective, progressive, perfective, past, imperative, and subjunctive." • The unmarked verb, frequently used, can indicate habitual aspect or perfective aspect in the past. •
ke + verb +
nei is frequently used and conveys the progressive aspect in the present. •
e + verb +
ana conveys the progressive aspect in any tense. •
ua + verb conveys the perfective aspect but is frequently omitted.
Wuvulu Wuvulu language is a minority language in Pacific. The Wuvulu verbal aspect is hard to organize because of its number of morpheme combinations and the interaction of semantics between morphemes. Perfective, imperfective negation, simultaneous and habitual are four aspects markers in Wuvulu language. •
Perfective: The perfective marker
-li indicates the action is done before other action. •
Simultaneous: The marker
fi indicates the two actions are done at the same time or one action occurs while other action is in progress. •
Habitual: The marker fane- can indicate a habitual activity, which means "keep doing something" in English. Example:
Tokelauan There are three types of aspects one must consider when analyzing the Tokelauan language: inherent aspect, situation aspect, and viewpoint aspect. The inherent aspect describes the purpose of a verb and what separates verbs from one another. According to Vendler, inherent aspect can be categorized into four different types: activities, achievements, accomplishments, and states. Simple activities include verbs such as pull, jump, and punch. Some achievements are continue and win. Drive-a-car is an accomplishment while hate is an example of a state. Another way to recognize a state inherent aspect is to note whether or not it changes. For example, if someone were to hate vegetables because they are allergic, this state of hate is unchanging and thus, a state inherent aspect. On the other hand, an achievement, unlike a state, only lasts for a short amount of time. Achievement is the highpoint of an action.
Malay/Indonesian Like many
Austronesian languages, the verbs of the
Malay language follow a system of affixes to express changes in meaning. To express the aspects, Malay uses a number of
auxiliary verbs: :*
sudah:
perfective, 'saya sudah makan' = 'I have [already] eaten' :*
baru: near perfective, 'saya baru makan' = 'I have just eaten' :*
belum:
imperfective, 'saya belum makan' = 'I have not eaten' :*
sedang:
progressive not implicating an end :*
masih: progressive implicating an end :*
pernah:
semelfactive Philippine languages Like many
Austronesian languages, the verbs of the
Philippine languages follow a complex system of affixes to express subtle changes in meaning. However, the verbs in this family of languages are conjugated to express the aspects and not the tenses. Though many of the
Philippine languages do not have a fully codified grammar, most of them follow the verb aspects that are demonstrated by
Filipino or
Tagalog.
Creole languages Creole languages typically use the unmarked verb for timeless habitual aspect, or for stative aspect, or for perfective aspect in the past. Invariant pre-verbal markers are often used. Non-stative verbs typically can optionally be marked for the progressive, habitual, completive, or irrealis aspect. The progressive in English-based
Atlantic Creoles often uses
de (from English "be").
Jamaican Creole uses
a (from English "are") or
de for the present progressive and a combination of the past time marker (
did,
behn,
ehn or
wehn) and the progressive marker (
a or
de) for the past progressive (e.g.
did a or
wehn de).
Haitian Creole uses the progressive marker
ap. Some Atlantic Creoles use one marker for both the habitual and progressive aspects. In
Tok Pisin, the optional progressive marker follows the verb. Completive markers tend to come from superstrate words like "done" or "finish", and some creoles model the future/irrealis marker on the superstrate word for "go".
American Sign Language American Sign Language (ASL) is similar to many other sign languages in that it has no grammatical tense but many verbal aspects produced by modifying the base verb sign. An example is illustrated with the verb
TELL. The basic form of this sign is produced with the initial posture of the index finger on the chin, followed by a movement of the hand and finger tip toward the indirect object (the recipient of the telling). Inflected into the unrealized inceptive aspect ("to be just about to tell"), the sign begins with the hand moving from in front of the trunk in an arc to the initial posture of the base sign (i.e., index finger touching the chin) while inhaling through the mouth, dropping the jaw, and directing eye gaze toward the verb's object. The posture is then held rather than moved toward the indirect object. During the hold, the signer also stops the breath by closing the glottis. Other verbs (such as "look at", "wash the dishes", "yell", "flirt") are inflected into the unrealized inceptive aspect similarly: The hands used in the base sign move in an arc from in front of the trunk to the initial posture of the underlying verb sign while inhaling, dropping the jaw, and directing eye gaze toward the verb's object (if any), but subsequent movements and postures are dropped as the posture and breath are held. Other aspects in ASL include the following: stative, inchoative ("to begin to..."), predispositional ("to tend to..."), susceptative ("to... easily"), frequentative ("to... often"), protractive ("to... continuously"), incessant ("to... incessantly"), durative ("to... for a long time"), iterative ("to... over and over again"), intensive ("to... very much"), resultative ("to... completely"), approximative ("to... somewhat"), semblitive ("to appear to..."), increasing ("to... more and more"). Some aspects combine with others to create yet finer distinctions. Aspect is unusual in ASL in that transitive verbs derived for aspect lose their grammatical transitivity. They remain semantically transitive, typically assuming an object made prominent using a topic marker or mentioned in a previous sentence. See
Syntax in ASL for details. ==Terms for various aspects==