Is there any difference in meaning behind grammatical terms of "perfective aspect" and "perfect aspect"?
Some people regard the perfect as an aspect, but much modern grammar takes it to be a grammatical category (a type of past tense). Perfective is not a category, but a semantic interpretation, where the meaning is typically used to describe non-progressive clauses. Compare: She goes to school .
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Some people regard the perfect as an aspect, but much modern grammar takes it to be a grammatical category (a type of past tense).
Perfective is not a category, but a semantic interpretation, where the meaning is typically used to describe non-progressive clauses. Compare:
She goes to school. [perfective]
She is going to school. [imperfective]