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durativity

Durativity is a semantic and grammatical property of predicates that describes events or states as extending over time, without a defined endpoint intrinsic to the event. In linguistic analysis, durative readings are often contrasted with telic or punctual readings, where an event has a built-in culmination or boundary. The notion is closely tied to verb aspect and cross-linguistic marking of ongoing duration.

Classic theories, such as Vendler’s aktionsarten, divide predicates into categories including activities (durative and atelic), states

Cross-linguistically, durativity is realized through various devices, including imperfective/aspect markers, progressive constructions, habitual aspect, or lexical

(durative
but
non-dynamic),
accomplishments
(durative
and
telic),
and
achievements
(punctual).
Durativity
is
most
closely
associated
with
the
imperfective
or
progressive
readings,
which
describe
ongoing
processes
(for
example,
The
river
flows,
She
is
reading).
By
contrast,
telic
predicates
like
eat
an
apple
or
build
a
house
imply
a
boundary
and
a
completed
result.
Many
languages
can
express
durativity
of
telic
verbs
by
using
imperfective
morphology
or
adverbial
duration
phrases
(for
two
hours),
yielding
a
reading
in
which
the
event
is
not
treated
as
a
single
bounded
whole.
properties
of
the
verb.
Some
languages
have
explicit
durative
or
imperfective
morphemes;
others
rely
on
syntactic
or
lexical
means
to
convey
ongoingness.
Durativity
interacts
with
factors
such
as
agency,
control,
and
time
span,
and
it
is
a
central
concern
in
the
study
of
event
structure,
aspect,
and
temporal
interpretation.