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  • | PERF || Perfect aspect | CONT || Continuous aspect
    4 KB (586 words) - 00:28, 23 July 2015
  • | PERF || Perfect aspect | CONT || Continuous aspect
    4 KB (581 words) - 07:52, 26 May 2017
  • | <small>secondary aspect</small> | <small>primary aspect</small>
    10 KB (1,496 words) - 08:41, 13 November 2014
  • ...med by the particle ''dion'' followed by a verb in either present, present continuous, or past. ..., many of which are worth noticing because they developed into newer tense/aspect combinations in daughter languages.
    11 KB (1,586 words) - 22:29, 27 May 2018
  • There are no conjugations for person, but there is verb aspect, tense, and voice. ====Aspect====
    16 KB (2,540 words) - 17:42, 5 July 2021
  • | {{sc|asp}} || [[aspect (grammar)|aspect]] | {{sc|compl, cpl}} || [[completive aspect]]
    18 KB (2,395 words) - 14:30, 18 April 2020
  • The affix positions are the following: <tt>tense-aspect.VERB.mood.negation</tt> ==== ''Aspect'' ====
    19 KB (2,603 words) - 11:53, 6 July 2021
  • ...ermined either by the phonology or the morphology. Verbs are inflected for aspect, time, valency, and mood. Some particles are inflected for number and case. ...not readily distinguish the one from the other, and consider them to be a continuous entity.
    57 KB (7,227 words) - 11:26, 25 March 2021
  • ...lines nouns under a 12 case system and conjugates verbs for person, tense, aspect, and mood. Adjectives are not inflected and have zero-grade derivation for ...different allophonic variations, Pangali's plosives are the most unstable aspect of the language's phonological inventory.
    16 KB (2,372 words) - 12:39, 12 September 2019
  • ...Semitic style, and from the author's investigations into tense, mood, and aspect systems of world languages during his undergraduate career in linguistics. * '''α''' is a verb in the perfective aspect construction
    44 KB (5,796 words) - 04:45, 1 April 2020
  • ====Aspect and Tense==== *(Continuous) Present tense: -(i)yor, -(ı)yor, -(u)yor, -(ü)yor, -yor
    40 KB (6,386 words) - 20:46, 14 November 2012
  • ...(realis and irrealis), and six tense/aspect combinations: present, present continuous, past perfect, past imperfect, future imperfect, future perfect.
    6 KB (892 words) - 19:26, 9 September 2017
  • | Aspect = no ...; verbs without an aspect marking particle imply progressive or continuous aspect, depending on context.
    27 KB (4,107 words) - 12:03, 18 January 2019
  • ...ction). Verbs are inflected for person and number, tense, voice, mood, and aspect. There are 6 person and number prefixes. There are 5 tenses, 8 voices, 14 m ...the same vowel again,another consonant for mood, and another consonant for aspect. It may be ended with an -a if it produces and undesirable consonant cluste
    25 KB (4,355 words) - 15:03, 8 February 2021
  • ...rivational affixes are added. The stem itself is composed of a root and an aspect marker. Sometimes there is also a thematic suffix fused to the stem. The af | <small>aspect</small>
    31 KB (4,724 words) - 18:27, 23 December 2020
  • <p>Older Kraliy verbs conjugate for tense, aspect and mood, agree with their subjects in person, number and grammatical gende ====Aspect====
    36 KB (5,870 words) - 22:03, 17 January 2020
  • <aspect>-VERB-<tense>-<mood>-<evidentiality>-<subject>-<voice>-<object>-<other argu ...) unmarked: present tense, indicative mood, active voice, punctual-stative aspect, singular number, absolutive case
    11 KB (1,911 words) - 10:04, 1 June 2017
  • ...last three usually being combined into a single category, called [[w:Tense–aspect–mood|TAM]]. In addition to finite verbs, non-finite forms such as [[w:Par ...n still retains its connection to the [[w:Desiderative mood|desiderative]] aspect, from which it originated. In fact, it is more accurate to translate Carpat
    34 KB (4,987 words) - 17:04, 15 March 2023
  • ...fective aspect, as in Romance, no perfect as in English, and no continuous aspect, as in English and some Romance languages. Except for ''esser'' 'to be', th ...ience' sake, this section often uses the term tense to also cover mood and aspect, though this is not strict grammatical terminology.
    27 KB (4,334 words) - 13:57, 26 April 2021
  • ...en't. It seems better to call then what they are: aspects and moods. The Continuous, the Perfective, and the Subjunctive are available in most verbs. What mak ==== Continuous ====
    21 KB (2,663 words) - 19:05, 23 October 2022
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