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imperfektive

Imperfektive, or imperfective, is a grammatical aspect that marks actions as ongoing, habitual, repeated, or not viewed as complete. It stands in contrast to the perfective aspect, which presents events as definite, bounded, and completed. Imperfective is not a tense by itself; it interacts with tense to express present, past, or future situations while emphasizing duration or repetition rather than endpoint.

In many languages, imperfective and perfective are central oppositions in the verbal system. In Slavic languages

Imperfective usage often includes ongoing actions, repeated occurrences, general statements, or actions without focusing on their

English uses imperfective mainly through the progressive aspect, as in I am reading or I was reading,

Overall, the imperfective is a fundamental notion in the study of aspect, helping to capture how speakers

such
as
Russian,
Polish,
Czech,
and
Serbian,
verbs
come
in
imperfective
and
perfective
forms.
Imperfective
forms
describe
ongoing
processes
or
habits,
while
perfective
forms
describe
single,
telic
events
with
a
clear
culmination.
For
example,
Russian
can
express
present
imperfective:
я
читаю
книгу
(I
am
reading
a
book);
past
imperfective:
я
читал
книгу
(I
was
reading
a
book
/
used
to
read);
past
perfective:
я
прочитал
книгу
(I
read
the
book
/
finished
reading).
completion.
It
can
express
duration,
simultaneity,
or
habit.
In
some
languages,
aspect
is
marked
morphologically
on
the
verb,
while
in
others
it
is
expressed
through
periphrastic
constructions
or
context.
which
convey
ongoing
action
but
do
not
constitute
a
separate
imperfective
class
as
in
many
Slavic
languages.
Some
languages
also
combine
imperfective
with
future
reference,
to
describe
planned
or
habitual
future
actions.
view
the
flow
and
termination
of
events
across
languages.