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