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§ 220. The categories of tense and aspect characterize an action from different points of view. The tense of a verb shows 1 the time of the action, while the aspect of a verb deals with

the development of the action.

The term aspect describes to some extent the contents of the category. It really shows what aspect of the action is considered: whether the action is taken in its progress or without that specification. Was writing presents the action in its progress, in its continuity (the 'continuous' aspect), wrote may present the same action without indications of continuity, on the one hand, or accomplishment, on j the other, though both may be gathered from the con-

i text, e. g. / wrote to him yesterday. I often wrote to him

: last year.

*See § 21.

2 Б А. Ильи ш, op. cit., p. 162.

3 А. И. С м и p н и ц к и и, op. cit., p. 316.

4 В. Н. Ярцева. Длительные времена и проблемы вида «Уч. Зап. ЛГУ», 1940, № 58.

137

§ 221. With regard to the category of aspect verbs divide into those that have aspect opposites and those that have not. The latter are united by the oblique, or lexico-grammatical, or potential meaning of 'non-continuous aspect'. As usual, the neutralization of 'aspect' opposemes depends on the lexical meanings of the corresponding verbs.

Here is a brief enumeration of some groups of verbs usually having no aspect opposites.

  1. Verbs presenting diverse relations as actions — belong, contain, consist, date, possess, resemble, result, suffice, etc.

  2. Certain link-verbs (mostly those of 'seeming') such as appear, look, prove, seem, turn out, etc.

The 'actions' denoted by the two groups have little or no dynamic force. This is at the bottom of their not being used with the 'continuous' meaning.

  1. Verbs of 'physical perceptions' (see, hear, feel, smell) denoting constant properties viewed as actions.

  2. Verbs of 'mental perceptions' (believe, dislike, dis­ trust, hate, hope, know, like, trust, understand, etc.). which are likewise, verbs of weak dynamic force.

4) 'Point-action' verbs denoting instantaneous acts of very short duration, unless such acts are repeated (burst, jump, drop, pick up, etc.).

Sometimes, however, the potential meanings are actual­ized by the use of a 'continuous aspect' opposite showing the progress of the action at a given moment or during a cer­tain period and stressing its temporary, transient nature, as in She was not hating him any more at that crucial moment. (Ruck); You are not seeing him to advantage now. (Daily Worker).

THE FINITES

§ 222. Besides those properties that characterize the verb as a whole, the finites possess certain features not shared by the verbids.

  1. The grammatical categories of mood, tense, person, number and posteriority.

  2. Grammatical cornbinability (The boy plays. The boys play.).

  3. The function of the predicate.

138

§ 223. As already mentioned (§ 187), the finites form three systems called 'moods': the 'indicative' mood, the 'subjunctive' mood, and the 'imperative' mood. The correla­tion of these systems constitutes the category of mood.

The features of the finites enumerated above fully mani­fest themselves only in the indicative mood system. Therefore it is expedient to begin the analysis of the finites with the category of mood, and then discuss their properties within the frame of each mood system.

The Category of Mood