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verbchanging

Verbchanging is a linguistic term used to describe the systematic modification of a verb’s form to express grammatical information such as tense, aspect, mood, voice, number, or person. It encompasses the processes by which verbs shift their shape within a language’s conjugation system, either through inflection, vowel alternation, or stem changes.

The mechanisms of verbchanging include several patterns. Inflection involves adding or changing affixes to indicate grammatical

Cross-linguistically, verbchanging is a central feature of many conjugating languages, especially in the Indo-European family, where

In linguistic analysis, verbchanging is contrasted with derivational changes that form new words or with periphrastic

categories.
Ablaut
or
stem-vowel
alternation
changes
a
verb’s
internal
vowels
to
mark
different
tense
or
aspect.
Consonant
mutation
or
sound
changes
can
accompany
inflection
in
some
languages.
Suppletion,
where
an
entirely
different
root
is
used
for
different
forms
(for
example
be/was,
go/went),
is
another
extreme
form
of
verbchanging.
Some
languages
exhibit
periphrastic
verbchanging,
using
auxiliary
words
in
combination
with
a
base
verb
to
convey
tense
or
aspect.
strong
and
weak
verb
classes
show
different
patterns
of
stem
changes
and
affixation.
Other
language
families
rely
more
on
isolates
or
analytic
constructions,
where
auxiliary
words
rather
than
internal
vowel
or
stem
changes
carry
the
grammatical
information.
Historical
development
often
shows
verbchanging
arising
from
sound
changes,
analogy,
or
contact
with
other
languages,
leading
to
irregular
forms
or
new
paradigms.
constructions
that
do
not
alter
the
verb’s
core
form.
See
also
morphology,
conjugation,
and
ablaut.