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The perfective aspect, on the other hand, has a specific suffix.
The perfective aspect depicts an action that has already been finished or done with.
In their place tar- develops from perfective aspect into a common past tense.
This is the essence of the perfective aspect: An event presented as an unanalyzed whole.
This distinction is actually one of perfective aspect.
The aorist participle may be used where the action is completed, called the perfective aspect.
The perfective aspect of the past is used when the speech refers to past situations that were finished, or complete.
In English it can be used to refer to the simple past verb form, which sometimes (but not always) expresses perfective aspect.
The event in the past could be either stative, habitual, or perfective aspect, but not progressive.
Verbs are of imperfective or perfective aspect, often occurring in pairs.
The perfective aspect is derived by adding a preverb to the verb.
In these languages the aorist is usually a form that expresses perfective aspect and often refers to past events.
The perfective aspect allows the speaker to describe the action as finished, completed, finished in the natural way.
This is the perfect stem, and it is used for all of the tenses in the perfective aspect.
Usage of the perfective aspect follows the same pattern as the imperfective aspect.
The aorist generally presents a situation as an undivided whole, also known as the perfective aspect.
The perfective aspect verbs also use the perfect passive participle in the passive voice.
As with all perfective aspect tenses, the perfect passive participle is used in the passive voice.
It should not be confused with the perfective aspect, which refers to the viewing of an action as a single (but not necessarily prior) event.
The Roman verb for the same event is already in the perfective aspect: condere, literally "to accomplish the single act of putting together."
Languages may mark perfective aspect with morphology, syntactic construction, lexemes/particles, or other means.
Biblical Hebrew uses the perfective aspect.
All tenses contrast imperfective and perfective aspect.
Completive or perfective aspect expressed through the word "pinis" (from English: finish):
The unmarked verb, frequently used, can indicate habitual aspect or perfective aspect in the past.