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imperfekti

Imperfekti, or the imperfect, is a grammatical category used in many languages to describe actions or states in the past without signaling their completion. It is typically associated with ongoing actions, habitual or repeated past actions, and background description in narratives. It often contrasts with perfective tenses, which present an action as a completed whole.

Across languages, the imperfect is a distinct past tense or aspect. In Romance languages such as Spanish,

In Finnish grammar, imperfekti is the term for past-tense verb forms used to report past events or

Uses of the imperfect include describing background scenes in narrative, signaling that a past action was ongoing,

Form and realization differ by language: some languages rely on affixes to mark the imperfect, others use

French,
Italian
and
Portuguese,
the
imperfect
is
formed
with
characteristic
endings:
hablaba,
comía;
parlait;
parlava;
falava.
In
Latin
the
imperfect
uses
endings
like
-bam,
-bas,
-bat,
-bamus,
-batis,
-bant.
In
English,
the
imperfect
sense
is
usually
rendered
with
was/were
+
present
participle
(I
was
speaking)
or
with
used
to
for
habitual
past
actions.
states,
and
it
is
one
of
several
past-tense
options
available
in
the
language.
The
exact
forms
vary
by
verb
class,
but
the
function
is
to
express
simple
past
or
ongoing
past
activity.
or
noting
habitual
actions
in
the
past.
It
is
often
contrasted
with
the
perfect
or
aorist,
which
emphasize
completion
or
a
single,
bounded
event.
periphrastic
constructions
or
a
combination
of
mood
and
tense.
The
concept
is
central
to
discussions
of
aspect
and
tense
in
comparative
grammar.