Home

presentimperfective

Presentimperfective refers to a grammatical category in languages that mark aspect, indicating that an action in the present is in progress, habitual, or repeated, rather than completed. It is typically realized as the present form of an imperfective aspect, contrasting with a present form of a perfective aspect.

In languages with explicit aspect systems, the present-imperfective is formed by imperfective verbs in the present

Usage and interpretation vary by language, but common readings include ongoing actions (I am reading), habitual

Cross-linguistically, present-imperfective is part of a broader contrast between imperfective and perfective aspect, illustrating how languages

See also: aspect, imperfective, perfective, present tense.

tense.
Morphology
or
auxiliary
constructions
may
signal
the
imperfective
meaning
through
prefixes,
reduplication,
aspect-marking
suffixes,
or
periphrastic
forms.
The
form
chosen
often
affects
how
speakers
interpret
duration,
repetition,
and
completeness
of
the
action.
or
repeated
actions
(I
read
every
day),
and
generic
statements
about
current
activities.
In
some
languages,
the
present-imperfective
can
also
reference
future
events
when
anchored
in
a
future-oriented
context
or
time
expression.
For
example,
the
present-imperfective
in
some
Slavic
languages
can
convey
future
meaning
with
appropriate
adverbial
time
cues,
even
though
the
verb
is
morphologically
imperfective
in
the
present.
In
contrast,
a
present
form
of
the
perfective
aspect
generally
does
not
express
an
in-progress
action
and
may
indicate
a
future
event
or
a
single,
completed
action.
encode
temporal
structure
and
how
speakers
view
the
internal
structure
of
actions.