durative

answer Answers

ProphetesAI is thinking...

MindMap

Loading...

Sources

1
durative
durative, a. (ˈdjʊərətɪv) [f. duration + -ive.] Continuing; not completed; spec. in Gram. applied to a form which marks action as going on. Also as n. Hence ˈduratively adv., duraˈtivity.1889 W. R. Morfill Russ. Gram. 40 Durative verbs on taking a prefix become perfective. 1895 [see perfective a. 3]... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 3.0 0.0
2
Semelfactive
A semelfactive event is punctual or non-durative, since it happens suddenly and lasts only a moment. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 1.5 0.0
3
ingressively
inˈgressively, adv. [f. ingressive a. + -ly2.] In an ingressive manner.1921 H. Poutsma Characters of Eng. Verb i. 2 The actions expressed by verbs..may be..(1) indefinitely durative,..(2) ingressively durative, i.e. with the initial stage of the action more distinctly thought of than the rest. 1928 ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.90000004 0.0
4
Delimitative aspect
It is sometimes called durative aspect. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.6 0.0
5
perfective
perfective, a. and n. Now rare except in Gram. (pəˈfɛktɪv) [ad. L. type *perfectīv-us (perh. in mod.L.: cf. It. perfettivo, Sp. perfectivo): see perfect v. and -ive.] A. adj. 1. Tending to make perfect or complete; conducive to the perfecting or perfection of anything.1596 Bacon Max. & Use Com. Law ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.6 0.0
6
Dynamic verb
For example, a dynamic verb may be said to have a durative aspect if there is not a defined endpoint or a punctual aspect if there is a defined endpoint wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.3 0.0
7
imperfective
imperfective, a. (n.) (ɪmpəˈfɛktɪv) [f. imperfect a. + -ive: cf. perfective.] A. adj. † 1. Characterized by imperfection; imperfect.a 1677 Manton Serm. Hebr. xi. verse 16, Wks. 1873 XIV. 343 If we be imperfective, the fault is in ourselves. 1684 N. S. Crit. Enq. Edit. Bible xvi. 156 Their Copies are... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
8
Lexical aspect
Of achievements and states, achievements are instantaneous, but states are durative. His divisions of the categories were as follows: states, activities, and accomplishments are durative, but semelfactives and achievements are punctual. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.3 0.0
9
Can なっている represent an ongoing change as well as a resultant (completed) change? From reading a bunch, I've been under the vague impression that `[adverb]+` can be interpreted both progressively and resultatively; acc...
However, durative usage is possible when the subject is plural or collective, because collection of punctual actions that occur gradually can be regarded as a durative action.
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.3 0.0
10
Verbeia
of the name may represent a Celtic reflex of the Proto-Indo-European root *wer-bhe- ‘bend, turn,’ cognate with Modern English warp, followed by the durative wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.3 0.0
11
Kâte language
Durative aspect can be conveyed by adding -e- before the present tense marker or -ju- before the near past tense marker. Coordinate-dependent (clause-medial) verbs are not marked for tense (or mood), but only for whether their actions are sequential, simultaneous, or durative wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.0 0.0
12
segmentative
segmentative, a. Linguistics. (sɛgˈmɛntətɪv) [f. segment n. + -ative.] = segmental a. 2 c (see also quot. 1936).1936 Language XII. 127 Punctual and segmentative aspects of verbs in Hopi... The segmentative aspect is formed by final reduplication of this root plus the durative suffix -ta. 1961 Amer. ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.0 0.0
13
Marra language
The past continuous durative positive, present negative/positive, future indefinite positive, future continuous durative positive, and desiderative positive all take a "durative" morpheme in the verb complex's "durative stem-initial prefix" slot; all other categories are unmarked. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.0 0.0
14
deverbal
deverbal, n. and a. Gram. (dɪˈvɜːbəl) [f. de- + verb + -al1.] A. adj. Derived from a verb. B. n. = deverbative n.1934 Priebsch & Collinson German Lang. ii. iii. 225 The suffix -ēn had two specific functions: (a) to form durative deverbals, e.g. hangēn ‘to be hanging’. 1946 Ibid. (ed. 2) 256 The deve... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.0 0.0
15
Midob language
Extensions modify or add meaning to the verb like negation, intention, affirmation, completed action, plurality of subject–object or action, durative, wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.0 0.0