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Tkacka15 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Perfective aspect

Is there any difference in meaning behind grammatical terms of "perfective aspect" and "perfect aspect"?

  

Top answer

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 .

  • 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]
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1 Answers
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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]

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