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Grammatical aspect in Slavic languages

In almost all modern Slavic languages, only one type of aspectual opposition governs verbs, verb phrases and verb-related structures, manifesting in two grammatical aspects: perfective and imperfective (in contrast with English verb grammar, which conveys several aspectual oppositions: perfect vs. neutral; progressive vs. nonprogressive; and in the past tense, habitual ("used to ...") vs. neutral). The aspectual distinctions exist on the lexical level - speakers have no universal method of forming a perfective verb from a given imperfective one (or conversely). Perfective verbs are most often formed by means of prefixes, changes in the root, using a completely different root (suppletion), or changes in stress. Possessing a prefix does not necessarily mean that a verb is perfective.

General characteristics

With a few exceptions, each Slavic verb is either perfective or imperfective. Most verbs form canonical pairs of one perfective and one imperfective verb with generally the same meaning. However, each Slavic language contains a number of bi-aspectual verbs, which may be used as both imperfective and perfective. They are mainly borrowings from non-Slavic languages, but some native verbs also belong to this group. As opposed to them, mono-aspectual verbs are mainly native. There are mono-aspectual imperfective verbs without perfective equivalents (among others, verbs with the meaning "to be" and "to have" - note however that Russian does have a rarely used perfective form of "to be", and thus also "to have" via the usual U-construction - namely, "побыть") as well as perfective verbs without imperfective equivalents (for instance, verbs with the meaning "become ...", e.g. "to become paralyzed", etc.; Russian distinguishes these again, namely, for this example, "парализовать(ся)", perfective, vs "парализовывать(ся)", imperfective, even despite the root "парализ-", paraliz-, is non-native).

Aspect in Slavic is a superior category in relation to tense or mood. Particularly, some verbal forms (like infinitive) cannot distinguish tense but they still distinguish aspect. Here is the list of Polish verb forms formed by both imperfective and perfective verbs (such a list is similar in other Slavic languages). The example is an imperfective and a perfective Polish verb with the meaning 'to write'. All personal forms are given in third person, masculine singular, with Russian analog if it exists:

  • Infinitive: pisać - napisać / писать - написать
  • Passive participle: pisany - napisany / писаный - написанный
  • Gerund: pisanie - napisanie / писание - написание
  • Past impersonal form: pisano - napisano / писано - написано
  • Past impersonal form in subjunctive: pisano by - napisano by
  • Past tense: pisał - napisał / писал - написал
  • Future tense: będzie pisać / będzie pisał - napisze / будет писать - напишет
  • Conditional, first form: pisałby - napisałby / писал бы - написал бы
  • Conditional, second form: byłby pisał - byłby napisał
  • Imperative: niech pisze - niech napisze / пусть пишет - пусть напишет

The following may be formed only if the verb is imperfective:

  • Contemporary adverbial participle – pisząc / пиша exists, albeit not commonly used
  • Active participle – piszący / пишущий, писучий (paronymic pair[clarification needed])
  • Present tense – pisze / пишет

One form may be created only if the verb is perfective, namely:

  • Anterior adverbial participle – napisawszy / написав(ши)

Roles

The perfective aspect allows the speaker to describe the action as finished, completed, finished in the natural way. The imperfective aspect does not present the action as finished, but rather as pending or ongoing.

An example is the verb "to eat" in the Serbo-Croatian. The verb translates either as jesti (imperfective) or pojesti (perfective). Now, both aspects could be used in the same tense of the language. For example, (omitting, for simplicity, feminine forms like jela):

Example Tense Aspect
Ja sam jeo past imperfective
Ja sam pojeo perfective
Ja sam bio jeo pluperfect imperfective
Ja sam bio pojeo perfective
Ja ću jesti future imperfective
Ja ću pojesti perfective

Ja sam pojeo signals that the action was completed. Its meaning can be given as "I ate (something) and I finished eating (it)"; or "I ate (something) up".

Ja sam jeo signals that the action took place (at a specified moment, or in the course of one's life, or every day, etc.); it may mean "I was eating", "I ate" or "I have been eating".

The following examples are from Polish.

Imperfective verbs convey:

  • actions and states in progress, just ongoing states and actions, with significant course (in opinion of the speaker);
  • actions that serve as a background for other (perfective) actions, ex. czytałem książkę, gdy zadzwonił telefon 'I was reading the book when the telephone rang';
  • simultaneous actions, ex. będę czytać książkę, podczas gdy brat będzie pisać list 'I will be reading the book while brother will be writing the letter';
  • durative actions, lasting through some time, e.g. krzyczał 'he was shouting', będzie drgać 'it will be vibrating';
  • aimless motions, ex. chodzę 'I am walking here and there';
  • multiple (iterative) actions, ex. dopisywać 'to insert many times to the text', będziemy wychodziły 'we will go out (many times)';
  • actions heading towards no or an unspecified purpose: będę pisał list 'I will be writing the letter';
  • continuous states, ex. będę stać 'I will be standing'.

Perfective verbs can refer to the past or to the future, but not to present actions – an action happening now cannot be ended, so it cannot be perfective. Perfective verbs convey:

  • states and actions that are seen as having finished (even if a second ago) or becoming so in a future time-point, have no significant course, have short duration or are treated as a whole by the speaker, ex. krzyknął 'he shouted', drgnie 'it will stir (only once)';
  • single-time actions, ex. dopisać 'to insert to the text', wyszedł 'he went out';
  • actions whose goals are seen as having been achieved, even if with difficulty, ex. przeczytałem 'I have read', doczytała się 'she finished reading and found what she had sought';
  • circumstantial actions leading up to a state, ex. pokochała 'she came to love', zrozumiesz 'you (sg.) will understand', poznamy 'we will get to know';
  • the beginning of the action or the state, ex. wstanę 'I will stand up' (and I will stand), zaczerwienił się 'he reddened';
  • the end of the action or the state, ex. dośpiewaj 'sing until the end';
  • actions executed in many places, on many objects or by many subjects at the same time, ex. powynosił 'he carried out (many things)', popękają 'They will break out in many places', poucinać 'To cut off many items';
  • actions or states when they are seen as constituting a lexeme-specific block of time (Aktionsart), ex. postoję 'I will stand for a little time', pobył 'he was (there) for some time'.

Most simple Polish verbs are imperfective (as in other Slavic languages), ex. iść 'to walk, to go', nieść 'to carry', pisać 'to write'. But there are also few simple perfective verbs, ex. dać 'to give', siąść 'to sit down'. Also, many perfective verbs with suffixes and without prefixes exist, ex. krzyknąć 'to shout', kupić 'to buy' (cf. the imperfective kupować with a different suffix).

Special imperfective verbs express aimless motions. They are mono-aspectual, i.e., they have no perfective equivalents. They are formed from other imperfective verbs by stem alternations or suppletion, ex. nosić 'to carry around' (from nieść), chodzić 'to walk around, to go around' (from iść 'to go, to walk'). When such a verb is supplemented with an explicit aim or direction, an iterative sense is conveyed: chodzić do szkoły 'to go to school (usually, repeatedly, on several occasions)'.

Other iteratives build another group of mono-aspectual imperfective verbs. They are formed from other imperfective verbs, including the previous group: chadzać 'to walk around usually (from chodzić), jadać 'to eat usually' (from jeść 'to eat'). Neither group is very numerous: most Polish verbs cannot form iterative counterparts.

Those perfective verbs that express actions executed in many places, on many objects, or by many subjects at the same time, and those that are seen as constituting a lexeme-specific block of time have no imperfective counterpart. They are formed with the prefix po- (which can have other functions as well).

States and actions that are seen as constituting a lexeme-specific block of time can be expressed by means of both imperfective and perfective verbs: cały dzień leżał w łóżku 'he was in bed all day long' (literally: 'he lay in bed') means nearly the same as cały dzień przeleżał w łóżku. The difference is mainly stylistic: imperfective is neutral here, while using perfective causes stronger tone of the statement.

In most Slavic languages, including Polish, a present perfective verb form may stand by itself as future tense. More often than not grammars of these languages state that perfective verbs have no present tense but a simple future tense and imperfective verbs have present tense and only a compound future. In other languages, most notably Bulgarian, a perfective verb form may be used in its present tense only in compound forms. Examples: in Polish it is possible to say kupię chleb to mean I will buy [some] bread (and not *I buy some bread). In Bulgarian it is only possible to say ще купя хляб (I will buy [some] bread) or да купя ли хляб? (Shall I buy [some] bread).

Morphology of aspect in Slavic languages

Prefixes

Many perfective verbs are formed from simple imperfectives by prefixation. Various prefixes are used without any strict rules. In the context of specific verbs, the question of whether any given prefix carries a semantically neutral or canonical perfective sense is not straightforward; distinctions in meaning and dialectical differences influence the choice. For example: the perfective counterpart to malować is pomalować when it means 'to paint a wall; to fill with a color', or namalować when it means 'to paint a picture; to depict sth/sb'.

Changes in the stem or ending

Besides the canonical perfective counterpart, a number of secondary prefixed verbs may be formed from a given simple imperfective verb. They all have similar but distinct meaning and they form, as a rule, their own imperfective equivalents by means of suffixation (attaching suffixes) or stem alternation. Examples:

  • prać 'to wash / clean clothes with water and soap / washing powder' is a simple imperfective verb;
  • uprać is its canonical perfective counterpart, while doprać, przeprać are secondary derived perfective verbs with slightly different meanings;
  • dopierać, przepierać are secondary imperfective verbs that are counterparts for doprać, przeprać respectively; *upierać does not exist because the basic verb prać is the imperfective counterpart of uprać. (coincidentally upierać is an imperfective of a completely different verb uprzeć, typically used as reflexive verb uprzeć się)

Other examples include:

Verb Imperfective Perfective
to meet spotykać spotkać
to return wracać wrócić
to help pomagać pomóc
to begin zaczynać zacząć
to gather zbierać zebrać
to transport zawozić zawieźć

Suppletion

A small group of imperfective-perfective pairs results from suppletion. For example, in Polish:

Verb Imperfective Perfective
to take brać wziąć
to say mówić powiedzieć
to see widzieć zobaczyć
to watch oglądać obejrzeć
to put kłaść położyć
to find znajdować znaleźć
to go in/to go out (on foot) wchodzić / wychodzić wejść / wyjść
to ride in/to ride out (by car) wjeżdżać / wyjeżdżać wjechać / wyjechać

Other

Some verbs form their aspectual counterparts by simultaneous prefixation and suffixation, ex. (the first one is imperfective) stawiać - postawić 'to set up'.

Contrast between a perfective and an imperfective verb may be also indicated by stress, e.g. Russian perfective осы́пать, imperfective осыпа́ть (to strew, shower, heap upon something).

References

External links

grammatical, aspect, slavic, languages, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifyin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article does not cite any sources Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Grammatical aspect in Slavic languages news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In almost all modern Slavic languages only one type of aspectual opposition governs verbs verb phrases and verb related structures manifesting in two grammatical aspects perfective and imperfective in contrast with English verb grammar which conveys several aspectual oppositions perfect vs neutral progressive vs nonprogressive and in the past tense habitual used to vs neutral The aspectual distinctions exist on the lexical level speakers have no universal method of forming a perfective verb from a given imperfective one or conversely Perfective verbs are most often formed by means of prefixes changes in the root using a completely different root suppletion or changes in stress Possessing a prefix does not necessarily mean that a verb is perfective Contents 1 General characteristics 2 Roles 3 Morphology of aspect in Slavic languages 3 1 Prefixes 3 2 Changes in the stem or ending 3 3 Suppletion 3 4 Other 4 References 5 External linksGeneral characteristics EditWith a few exceptions each Slavic verb is either perfective or imperfective Most verbs form canonical pairs of one perfective and one imperfective verb with generally the same meaning However each Slavic language contains a number of bi aspectual verbs which may be used as both imperfective and perfective They are mainly borrowings from non Slavic languages but some native verbs also belong to this group As opposed to them mono aspectual verbs are mainly native There are mono aspectual imperfective verbs without perfective equivalents among others verbs with the meaning to be and to have note however that Russian does have a rarely used perfective form of to be and thus also to have via the usual U construction namely pobyt as well as perfective verbs without imperfective equivalents for instance verbs with the meaning become e g to become paralyzed etc Russian distinguishes these again namely for this example paralizovat sya perfective vs paralizovyvat sya imperfective even despite the root paraliz paraliz is non native Aspect in Slavic is a superior category in relation to tense or mood Particularly some verbal forms like infinitive cannot distinguish tense but they still distinguish aspect Here is the list of Polish verb forms formed by both imperfective and perfective verbs such a list is similar in other Slavic languages The example is an imperfective and a perfective Polish verb with the meaning to write All personal forms are given in third person masculine singular with Russian analog if it exists Infinitive pisac napisac pisat napisat Passive participle pisany napisany pisanyj napisannyj Gerund pisanie napisanie pisanie napisanie Past impersonal form pisano napisano pisano napisano Past impersonal form in subjunctive pisano by napisano by Past tense pisal napisal pisal napisal Future tense bedzie pisac bedzie pisal napisze budet pisat napishet Conditional first form pisalby napisalby pisal by napisal by Conditional second form bylby pisal bylby napisal Imperative niech pisze niech napisze pust pishet pust napishetThe following may be formed only if the verb is imperfective Contemporary adverbial participle piszac pisha exists albeit not commonly used Active participle piszacy pishushij pisuchij paronymic pair clarification needed Present tense pisze pishetOne form may be created only if the verb is perfective namely Anterior adverbial participle napisawszy napisav shi Roles EditThe perfective aspect allows the speaker to describe the action as finished completed finished in the natural way The imperfective aspect does not present the action as finished but rather as pending or ongoing An example is the verb to eat in the Serbo Croatian The verb translates either as jesti imperfective or pojesti perfective Now both aspects could be used in the same tense of the language For example omitting for simplicity feminine forms like jela Example Tense AspectJa sam jeo past imperfectiveJa sam pojeo perfectiveJa sam bio jeo pluperfect imperfectiveJa sam bio pojeo perfectiveJa cu jesti future imperfectiveJa cu pojesti perfectiveJa sam pojeo signals that the action was completed Its meaning can be given as I ate something and I finished eating it or I ate something up Ja sam jeo signals that the action took place at a specified moment or in the course of one s life or every day etc it may mean I was eating I ate or I have been eating The following examples are from Polish Imperfective verbs convey actions and states in progress just ongoing states and actions with significant course in opinion of the speaker actions that serve as a background for other perfective actions ex czytalem ksiazke gdy zadzwonil telefon I was reading the book when the telephone rang simultaneous actions ex bede czytac ksiazke podczas gdy brat bedzie pisac list I will be reading the book while brother will be writing the letter durative actions lasting through some time e g krzyczal he was shouting bedzie drgac it will be vibrating aimless motions ex chodze I am walking here and there multiple iterative actions ex dopisywac to insert many times to the text bedziemy wychodzily we will go out many times actions heading towards no or an unspecified purpose bede pisal list I will be writing the letter continuous states ex bede stac I will be standing Perfective verbs can refer to the past or to the future but not to present actions an action happening now cannot be ended so it cannot be perfective Perfective verbs convey states and actions that are seen as having finished even if a second ago or becoming so in a future time point have no significant course have short duration or are treated as a whole by the speaker ex krzyknal he shouted drgnie it will stir only once single time actions ex dopisac to insert to the text wyszedl he went out actions whose goals are seen as having been achieved even if with difficulty ex przeczytalem I have read doczytala sie she finished reading and found what she had sought circumstantial actions leading up to a state ex pokochala she came to love zrozumiesz you sg will understand poznamy we will get to know the beginning of the action or the state ex wstane I will stand up and I will stand zaczerwienil sie he reddened the end of the action or the state ex dospiewaj sing until the end actions executed in many places on many objects or by many subjects at the same time ex powynosil he carried out many things popekaja They will break out in many places poucinac To cut off many items actions or states when they are seen as constituting a lexeme specific block of time Aktionsart ex postoje I will stand for a little time pobyl he was there for some time Most simple Polish verbs are imperfective as in other Slavic languages ex isc to walk to go niesc to carry pisac to write But there are also few simple perfective verbs ex dac to give siasc to sit down Also many perfective verbs with suffixes and without prefixes exist ex krzyknac to shout kupic to buy cf the imperfective kupowac with a different suffix Special imperfective verbs express aimless motions They are mono aspectual i e they have no perfective equivalents They are formed from other imperfective verbs by stem alternations or suppletion ex nosic to carry around from niesc chodzic to walk around to go around from isc to go to walk When such a verb is supplemented with an explicit aim or direction an iterative sense is conveyed chodzic do szkoly to go to school usually repeatedly on several occasions Other iteratives build another group of mono aspectual imperfective verbs They are formed from other imperfective verbs including the previous group chadzac to walk around usually from chodzic jadac to eat usually from jesc to eat Neither group is very numerous most Polish verbs cannot form iterative counterparts Those perfective verbs that express actions executed in many places on many objects or by many subjects at the same time and those that are seen as constituting a lexeme specific block of time have no imperfective counterpart They are formed with the prefix po which can have other functions as well States and actions that are seen as constituting a lexeme specific block of time can be expressed by means of both imperfective and perfective verbs caly dzien lezal w lozku he was in bed all day long literally he lay in bed means nearly the same as caly dzien przelezal w lozku The difference is mainly stylistic imperfective is neutral here while using perfective causes stronger tone of the statement In most Slavic languages including Polish a present perfective verb form may stand by itself as future tense More often than not grammars of these languages state that perfective verbs have no present tense but a simple future tense and imperfective verbs have present tense and only a compound future In other languages most notably Bulgarian a perfective verb form may be used in its present tense only in compound forms Examples in Polish it is possible to say kupie chleb to mean I will buy some bread and not I buy some bread In Bulgarian it is only possible to say she kupya hlyab I will buy some bread or da kupya li hlyab Shall I buy some bread Morphology of aspect in Slavic languages EditPrefixes Edit Many perfective verbs are formed from simple imperfectives by prefixation Various prefixes are used without any strict rules In the context of specific verbs the question of whether any given prefix carries a semantically neutral or canonical perfective sense is not straightforward distinctions in meaning and dialectical differences influence the choice For example the perfective counterpart to malowac is pomalowac when it means to paint a wall to fill with a color or namalowac when it means to paint a picture to depict sth sb Changes in the stem or ending Edit Besides the canonical perfective counterpart a number of secondary prefixed verbs may be formed from a given simple imperfective verb They all have similar but distinct meaning and they form as a rule their own imperfective equivalents by means of suffixation attaching suffixes or stem alternation Examples prac to wash clean clothes with water and soap washing powder is a simple imperfective verb uprac is its canonical perfective counterpart while doprac przeprac are secondary derived perfective verbs with slightly different meanings dopierac przepierac are secondary imperfective verbs that are counterparts for doprac przeprac respectively upierac does not exist because the basic verb prac is the imperfective counterpart of uprac coincidentally upierac is an imperfective of a completely different verb uprzec typically used as reflexive verb uprzec sie Other examples include Verb Imperfective Perfectiveto meet spotykac spotkacto return wracac wrocicto help pomagac pomocto begin zaczynac zaczacto gather zbierac zebracto transport zawozic zawiezcSuppletion Edit A small group of imperfective perfective pairs results from suppletion For example in Polish Verb Imperfective Perfectiveto take brac wziacto say mowic powiedziecto see widziec zobaczycto watch ogladac obejrzecto put klasc polozycto find znajdowac znalezcto go in to go out on foot wchodzic wychodzic wejsc wyjscto ride in to ride out by car wjezdzac wyjezdzac wjechac wyjechacOther Edit Some verbs form their aspectual counterparts by simultaneous prefixation and suffixation ex the first one is imperfective stawiac postawic to set up Contrast between a perfective and an imperfective verb may be also indicated by stress e g Russian perfective osy pat imperfective osypa t to strew shower heap upon something References EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it August 2014 External links EditClarence A Manning English Tenses and Slavic Aspects Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grammatical aspect in Slavic languages amp oldid 1135828613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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