Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Perfect aspect

 
Wikipedia: Perfect aspect

In linguistics, the perfect aspect is variously considered either an aspect or tense that calls a listener's attention to the consequences generated by an action, rather than just the action itself. This must be distinguished from the perfective aspect (despite the same root of “perfect” and “perfective”),[1][2] which marks an action as complete and refers to it as a single whole, without internal structure. A sentence in the perfective aspect cannot be in the perfect aspect and vice versa.[3] The perfect aspect can refer to events in the past that have been finished (such as “He has already eaten dinner”) as well as events that are ongoing (such as “He has been working on this novel for a year”) or events that are to continue into the present (“He has composed operas for twenty years”).

Contents

In English

The perfect aspect is formed in English by conjugating the auxiliary verb "to have" and then appending the verb's past participle form. Verbs in the perfect aspect can be in the active or passive voice. Active verbs combine "to have" and the past participle form of the main verb ("have done," "They have done so much work"). Passive verbs in the perfect aspect require two past participle verb forms: "been" (the past participle of "to be") and the past participle of the main verb ("has been seen," "He has been seen by the doctor").

The conjugation of the verb "to have" determines the tense of the overall construction: 1) "have" and "has" in the present perfect tense, 2) "had" in the pluperfect tense, and 3) "will have" and "shall have" in the future perfect tense.

  • Present perfect tense: "The girl has eaten the cookie."
  • Pluperfect tense: "The girl had eaten the cookie before she ate her lunch."
  • Future perfect tense: "The girl will have eaten the cookie by this afternoon."

The perfect aspect can be combined with the progressive aspect, a type of imperfective aspect. In the progressive aspect, the verb "to be" is in the past participle form ("been"), while the main verb is in the present participle form ("has been teaching," "She has been teaching for ten years"). For passive verbs, the main verb is in the past participle form, but two forms of "to be" are used: "has been being taught," "The student has been being taught Latin"). The form of “to have” always precedes the form of "to be."

The perfect, the progressive, and the perfect progressive are three of the aspects used in English. The perfective, imperfective, completive, inceptive, punctual, iterative, and habitual are sometimes considered aspects in English as well.[4]

The tense of the verb "to have" dictates the time of the consequences but not of the action. For example, in the sentence "I have written a novel," the novel is clearly finished at present: the present tense of the verb "to have" indicates that the consequences -- the state of being an author with a completed novel -- are in the present tense, even though the authorship is in the past tense. It may mean, “I am (now) finished with the novel” or it may answer the question “Have you ever written a novel?” “I have written a novel” may have a different meaning from “I wrote a novel”; the novel might have been written in the recent past.[5] For this reason, it is not possible to write, “I have written a novel yesterday.”[6] The sentence “She has come” is likely to mean, “She is here now,” but “She came” does not.[1]

The use of the present perfect aspect rather than the simple past tense can suggest other consequences. The sentence “I have written novels for five years” implies that the person is still writing novels whereas the sentence “I wrote novels for five years” implies that the person has stopped writing novels.[5][7] The sentence “Have you been to the fair?” suggests that the fair is still going on, while the sentence “Did you go to the fair?” suggests that the fair is over.[8]

The present tense form in the progressive shows that the action began some time ago but is continuing: "I have been working on a new novel for two years." By contrast, the past progressive tense ("I was writing a novel") may connote that an action was interrupted ("I was writing a novel until the telephone rang")[9][10]; this connotation can also carry over into the pluperfect progressive tense ("I had been writing a novel when she walked in the room to talk to me").[11]

The past perfect (or the pluperfect) has sometimes been called the past-in-the-past. It can be used to refer to one past event that occurred before another past event. For example, “The girl had eaten the cookie before she ate her lunch.” Both the girl’s eating the cookie and the girl’s eating lunch were events in the past, but the former happened before the latter.

Outside the indicative mood, the perfect aspect has only a limited proper existence. Because the English modal verbs are largely defective, and because the English subjunctive mood by itself does not form a true preterite, the verb "to have" is often used to construct past tenses. “To have” forms the contrary-to-fact past conditional.[12] For example, “She can do it if she tries” and “She could do it if she tried” are both conditionals in the present tense; “She could have done it if she had tried” is the past conditional. When forming contrary-to-fact conditionals, English uses verb forms that are one step back in time. For example, the present conditional uses the past tense verbs: “If she had the book, she would read it right now.” The pluperfect (referred to as the past-in-the-past) is one step back in time after the simple past tense and is used for the past conditional: “If she had had the book, she would have read it immediately.”[13] These verbs might not be considered to be truly in the perfect aspect.[14]

“To have” is used for the past tense of epistemic modals. For example, “He cannot be a genius” and “He could not be a genius” are both in the present tense. “He could not have been a genius” is in the past tense.[15] This use of epistemic modals might not be considered to be truly in the perfect aspect.[14] The auxiliary verb “must” does not have a past tense form in modern English, and “to have” can be used for its epistemic meaning (for inferences): “He must have been at least seventy years old.” It is interesting to note that “must have” cannot be used for obligation or prohibition.[16] A sentence such as “He might have worked here five years so far” can be rewritten as “Perhaps he has worked here for five years so far”[17] and is considered a true perfect form by some linguists but not others.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b Thomas, Payne Edward (1997). Describing morphosyntax: a guide for field linguists. Cambridge University Press. pp. 240. http://books.google.com/books?id=LC3DfjWfCiwC&pg=PA239&lpg=PA239&dq=%22perfect+aspect%22+%22perfective+aspect%22&source=bl&ots=eWuePAU7T3&sig=aCX04vz1gA-C2O4c-r5HjMEF1w8&hl=en&ei=1Ri_ScHTAtKxtwe89tRT&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA240,M1. 
  2. ^ Trask, Robert Lawrence (1993). A Dictionary of Grammatical Terms in Linguistics. Routledge. pp. 204. http://books.google.com/books?id=erHbSh1xGvgC&pg=PA204&lpg=PA204&dq=%22perfect+aspect%22+%22perfective+aspect%22&source=bl&ots=aZlIS_BmkS&sig=cmuxZvvkFTbcmRpm58TseVQN9sA&hl=en&ei=jyO_SaLEFIivtwe_vIVb&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result. 
  3. ^ Meyer, Paul Georg (2005). Synchronic English Linguistics: An Introduction (3 ed.). Gunter Narr Verlag. pp. 23. http://books.google.com/books?id=I2hXL8WClNUC&pg=PA23&lpg=PA23&dq=%22perfect+and+perfective+aspect%22&source=bl&ots=KRPAqb-DVv&sig=pUrz3ghH_jHUOBZ0Vvpn6S_CwSg&hl=en&ei=8f--Sd3LCp_FtgezjMX6Cw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result#PPA23,M1. 
  4. ^ Thomas, Payne Edward (1997). Describing morphosyntax: a guide for field linguists. Cambridge University Press. pp. 238-241. http://books.google.com/books?id=LC3DfjWfCiwC&pg=PA239&lpg=PA239&dq=%22perfect+aspect%22+%22perfective+aspect%22&source=bl&ots=eWuePAU7T3&sig=aCX04vz1gA-C2O4c-r5HjMEF1w8&hl=en&ei=1Ri_ScHTAtKxtwe89tRT&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA238,M1. 
  5. ^ a b Present Perfect. Guide to Grammar and Writing.
  6. ^ The Meaning of Aspect. Edict Functional Grammar.
  7. ^ Sequence of Tenses. Guide to Grammar and Writing.
  8. ^ Chapter 6: Verbs: Perfect and Progressive Aspect.
  9. ^ Differentiating between Simple Past and Past Progressive. eWriting.
  10. ^ Quiz: Past Continuous and Past Simple – Interrupted Activities. BBC World Service Learning English
  11. ^ Past Perfect Progressive Tense.
  12. ^ Conditional Sentences.
  13. ^ Conditional Verb Forms. Guide to Grammar and Writing.
  14. ^ a b Jeanette S. DeCarrico (December 1986). "Tense, Aspect, and Time in the English Modality System". TESOL Quarterly 20 (4): 665-682. http://www.jstor.org/pss/3586517. 
  15. ^ Tim Stowell. UCLA. Tense and Modals. Page 9.
  16. ^ Difficulties of Teaching Modals.
  17. ^ Tim Stowell. UCLA. Tense and Modals. Page 21.
  18. ^ Jeanette S. DeCarrico (June 1987). "Comments on Jeanette S. DeCarrico's "Tense, Aspect, and Time in the English Modality System". Response to Nelson: Modals, Meaning, and Context". TESOL Quarterly 21 (2): 382-389. http://www.jstor.org/pss/3586745. 

See also

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Perfect aspect" Read more