From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In grammar, the
perfective aspect (abbreviated pfv) is an
aspect
that exists in many languages. The term "perfective aspect" is
generally used to refer to an action viewed as a whole, and it is
equivalent to the aspectual component of past-perfective tenses
variously called "aorist", "preterite", and "simple past". In
languages which have aspect, the perfective is often secondarily
used to indicate a momentary action, or the beginning or end of an
action.
The perfective aspect, referring to a single event conceived as
a unit, is distinguished from the imperfective aspect, which
represents an event in the process of unfolding (often a repeated
or habitual event), and from the prospective aspect, representing
an event that is 'about to' take place. In English, verbs in the
simple past form "X-ed" are often equivalent to a perfective
aspect, whereas verbs in the progressive "was X-ing" are often
equivalent to an imperfective. For example, both verbs in the
sentence "He raised his sword and struck the enemy" would be
translated as perfective by a language which distinguishes this
aspect; in the sentence "As he was striking the enemy, he was
killed by an arrow," however, the first verb would be imperfective
and the second perfective.
There are a number of important qualifications, however:
- Verbs that represent ongoing states, rather than actions, are
usually rendered in English with the simple past, but
would be rendered with the imperfective and not the perfective, for
example, "He had two dogs" or "There was a chair on the
floor".
- The English simple past can be used to represent habitual
actions, which would also be rendered as an imperfective, such as
"He walked his dog every day".
- Although the perfective is often described as corresponding to
a "momentary action", it can equally well be used for an action
that took time, as long as it is conceived of as a unit,
with a clearly defined start and end, such as "Last summer I
visited France".
- For some verbs in some languages, the difference between
perfective and imperfective conveys an additional meaning
difference; in such cases, the two aspects will typically be
translated using separate verbs in English. In Ancient Greek, for
example, the imperfective sometimes adds the notion of "try to do
something" (the so-called conative imperfect); hence the
same verb, in the imperfective (present or imperfect tense) and
aorist, respectively, is used to convey look and
see, search and find, listen
and hear. (For example, ἠκούομεν ēkouomen "we
listened" vs. ἠκούσαμεν ēkousamen "we heard".) Spanish has
similar pairs for certain verbs, such as (imperfect and preterite,
respectively) sabía "I knew" vs. supe "I found
out", podía "I was able to" vs. pude "I succeeded
(in doing something)", quería "I wanted to" vs.
quise "I tried to", no quería "I did not want to"
vs. no quise "I refused (to do something)". Such
differences are often highly language-specific.
Alternate
usage
The term "perfective aspect" is sometimes used to refer to the
perfect
aspect, which describes a state resulting from a previous
action (also described as a previous action with relevance to a
particular time, or a previous action viewed from the perspective
of a later time).
See also
External
links
| Grammatical and lexical
aspects |
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| Complete vs. incomplete |
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| Beginning vs. ending |
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| Consequences |
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#Lexical aspects.
Grammatical aspects unmarked.
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