imperfective aspect उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Semi-deponent verbs form their imperfective aspect tenses in the manner of ordinary active verbs; but their perfect are built periphrastically like deponents and ordinary passives; thus semideponent verbs have a perfect active participle instead of a perfect passive participle.
- Verbs often occur in imperfective and perfective pairs for example, " je [ " and " zje [ " both mean " to eat ", but the first has imperfective aspect, the second perfective.
- In the indicative mood, there are synthetic ( one-word, conjugated for person / number ) forms for the present tense, the past tense in the imperfective aspect, the past tense in the perfective aspect, and the future tense.
- When any of tense, aspect, and modality are specified, they are typically indicated with invariant pre-verbal markers in the sequence anterior relative tense ( prior to the time focused on ), irrealis mode ( conditional or future ), imperfective aspect.
- Besides being the background to'entered', the form'reading'presents " an internal portion of John's reading, [ with ] no explicit reference to the beginning or to the end of his reading . " This is the essence of the imperfective aspect.
- The simple ( one-word ) forms are commonly referred to as the present, the simple past or preterite ( past tense, perfective aspect ), the imperfect ( past tense, imperfective aspect ), the future, the conditional, the present subjunctive, and the imperfect subjunctive.
- The category of French, for example, the imperfect denotes past time in combination with imperfective aspect, while other verb forms ( the Latin perfect, and the French " pass?compos?" or " pass?simple " ) are used for past time reference with perfective aspect.
- Essentially, the perfective aspect looks at an event as a complete action, while the imperfective aspect views an event as the process of unfolding or a repeated or habitual event ( thus corresponding to the progressive / continuous aspect for events of short-term duration and to habitual aspect for longer terms ).
- In German, " Imperfekt " was used to refer to the simply conjugated past tense ( to contrast with the " Perfekt " or compound past form ), but the term " Pr�teritum " ( preterite ) is now preferred, since the form does not carry any implication of imperfective aspect.
- In all the conjugations except for the third conjugation, the " re " is removed from the second principal part ( for example, " portre " without the suffix " re " becomes " port " ) to form the present stem, which is used for all of the tenses in the imperfective aspect.