verbinflection
Verbinflection, or verb inflection, is the set of morphologically conditioned variants of a verb used to express grammatical information. It encodes categories such as tense, aspect, mood, voice, person, and number, and, in some languages, agreement with the subject or object. Inflected forms can be finite, used in clauses, or non-finite, used in non-clausal contexts (infinitives, participles, gerunds). Inflection contrasts with derivation, which creates new words or parts of speech rather than marking grammatical categories.
Morphology of verb inflection is typically realized through affixes (prefixes, suffixes, infixes), internal stem changes, or
Common inflectional categories include tense (past, present, future), aspect (perfective, imperfective), mood (indicative, subjunctive, imperative), voice
Examples illustrate diversity: English marks past tense with -ed and present participles with -ing; Spanish conjugates