III – 3 – PAST TENSE
9 Forms of the Past Tense
Multiple
variations of past tense that employ regular verbs occur in English.
Explanations of the distinctions follow. Note that each section includes
examples of positive-declarative, negative-declarative, and interrogative
forms.
1. Simple Past
A
sentence in the simple-past form describes an event that occurred in the past:
“They
agreed with us.”
“They
did not agree with us.”
“Did
they agree with us?”
Notice
that in the first sentence, the verb form of drive is in past tense, but in the
other examples, did
does the heavy lifting of indicating the tense, so drive remains in present
tense. In almost all other variations of past tense, the form of the verb “to
be” and the participle retain the same form regardless of the type of sentence.
2. Past Progressive (or Past Continuous)
Past-progressive
statements and questions describe something that began in the past and
continued to occur for a time before stopping:
“They
were agreeing with us.”
“They
were not agreeing with us.”
“Were
they agreeing with us?”
3. Past Perfect
This
tense form applies to events that began at a time preceding a period in the
past:
“They
had agreed with us.”
“They
had not agreed with us.”
“Had
they agreed with us?”
4. Past Perfect Progressive (or Past Perfect Continuous)
Sentences
with this tense form describe something that occurred in the past and continued
to occur after the fact but in the present is no longer occurring:
“They
had been agreeing with us.”
“They
had not been agreeing with us.”
“Had
they been agreeing with us?”
5. Past Habitual
A
sentence written in past-habitual tense describes an occurrence that once
occurred continuously or repeatedly:
“They
used to agree with us.”
“They
used to not agree with us.”
(This
formal usage is awkward and seldom used; we are more likely to write, “They
used to disagree with us.” An informal version of the sentence, more likely to
be used if no direct antonym like disagree is available for a given sentence,
is “They didn’t use to agree with us.”)
“Used
they to agree with us?”
(This
formal usage is rare. The informal form, much more common, is, “Did they use to
agree with us?”)
6. Time-Specific Past Habitual
A
variation of the past-habitual tense includes a specific time frame:
“Before,
they would agree with us.”
“Before,
they would not agree with us.”
“Before,
would they agree with us?”
7. Past Intensive
A
sentence in the past-intensive form describes something confirmed as having
occurred:
“They
did agree with us.”
“They
did not agree with us.”
“Did
they agree with us?”
8. Future in the Past
A
future-in-the-past construction describes something that was supposed to have
occurred after a time in the past:
“They
were going to agree with us.”
“They
were not going to agree with us.”
“Were
they going to agree with us?”
Past Subjunctive
This form is not numbered, because it is not, despite its name, a type of past tense, but it is identified here to make that point. A sentence formed in the past subjunctive describes a counterfactual event:
This form is not numbered, because it is not, despite its name, a type of past tense, but it is identified here to make that point. A sentence formed in the past subjunctive describes a counterfactual event:
“If
they were going to agree with us, they would have told us by now.”
“If
they were not going to agree with us, they would have told us by now.”
“If
they were they going to agree with us, would they have told us by now?”
9. Past-Perfect Subjunctive
Sentences
with this subjunctive form, by contrast, do have a past-tense sense:
“Had
they agreed with us, they would have told us by now.”
“Had
they not agreed with us, they would have told us by now.”
“Had they agreed with us, would they have told us by now?”
Past Tense Irregular Verbs List
English Grammar Notes
Part One
The following is a list of Irregular Verbs in English:
Verb
|
Past Simple
|
Past Participle
|
arise
|
arose
|
arisen
|
babysit
|
babysat
|
babysat
|
be
|
was
/ were
|
been
|
beat
|
beat
|
beaten
|
become
|
became
|
become
|
bend
|
bent
|
bent
|
begin
|
began
|
begun
|
bet
|
bet
|
bet
|
bind
|
bound
|
bound
|
bite
|
bit
|
bitten
|
bleed
|
bled
|
bled
|
blow
|
blew
|
blown
|
break
|
broke
|
broken
|
breed
|
bred
|
bred
|
bring
|
brought
|
brought
|
broadcast
|
broadcast
|
broadcast
|
build
|
built
|
built
|
buy
|
bought
|
bought
|
catch
|
caught
|
caught
|
choose
|
chose
|
chosen
|
come
|
came
|
come
|
cost
|
cost
|
cost
|
cut
|
cut
|
cut
|
deal
|
dealt
|
dealt
|
dig
|
dug
|
dug
|
do
|
did
|
done
|
draw
|
drew
|
drawn
|
drink
|
drank
|
drunk
|
drive
|
drove
|
driven
|
eat
|
ate
|
eaten
|
fall
|
fell
|
fallen
|
feed
|
fed
|
fed
|
feel
|
felt
|
felt
|
fight
|
fought
|
fought
|
find
|
found
|
found
|
fly
|
flew
|
flown
|
forbid
|
forbade
|
forbidden
|
forget
|
forgot
|
forgotten
|
forgive
|
forgave
|
forgiven
|
freeze
|
froze
|
frozen
|
get
|
got
|
gotten
|
give
|
gave
|
given
|
go
|
went
|
gone
|
grow
|
grew
|
grown
|
hang*
|
hung
|
hung
|
have
|
had
|
had
|
hear
|
heard
|
heard
|
hide
|
hid
|
hidden
|
hit
|
hit
|
hit
|
hold
|
held
|
held
|
hurt
|
hurt
|
hurt
|
keep
|
kept
|
kept
|
know
|
knew
|
known
|
lay
|
laid
|
laid
|
lead
|
led
|
led
|
leave
|
left
|
left
|
lend
|
lent
|
lent
|
let
|
let
|
let
|
lie
**
|
lay
|
lain
|
light
|
lit
|
lit
|
lose
|
lost
|
lost
|
make
|
made
|
made
|
mean
|
meant
|
meant
|
meet
|
met
|
met
|
pay
|
paid
|
paid
|
put
|
put
|
put
|
quit
|
quit
|
quit
|
read
***
|
read
|
read
|
ride
|
rode
|
ridden
|
ring
|
rang
|
rung
|
rise
|
rose
|
risen
|
run
|
ran
|
run
|
say
|
said
|
said
|
see
|
saw
|
seen
|
sell
|
sold
|
sold
|
send
|
sent
|
sent
|
set
|
set
|
set
|
shake
|
shook
|
shaken
|
shine
|
shone
|
shone
|
shoot
|
shot
|
shot
|
show
|
showed
|
shown
|
shut
|
shut
|
shut
|
sing
|
sang
|
sung
|
sink
|
sank
|
sunk
|
sit
|
sat
|
sat
|
sleep
|
slept
|
slept
|
slide
|
slid
|
slid
|
speak
|
spoke
|
spoken
|
spend
|
spent
|
spent
|
spin
|
spun
|
spun
|
spread
|
spread
|
spread
|
stand
|
stood
|
stood
|
steal
|
stole
|
stolen
|
stick
|
stuck
|
stuck
|
sting
|
stung
|
stung
|
strike
|
struck
|
struck
|
swear
|
swore
|
sworn
|
sweep
|
swept
|
swept
|
swim
|
swam
|
swum
|
swing
|
swung
|
swung
|
take
|
took
|
taken
|
teach
|
taught
|
taught
|
tear
|
tore
|
torn
|
tell
|
told
|
told
|
think
|
thought
|
thought
|
throw
|
threw
|
thrown
|
understand
|
understood
|
understood
|
wake
|
woke
|
woken
|
wear
|
wore
|
worn
|
win
|
won
|
won
|
withdraw
|
withdrew
|
withdrawn
|
write
|
wrote
|
written
|
* HANG - Hang has two different meanings. The first is "to
attach (or hang) something in a high position" (e.g. on the wall or on a
hook). In this case we use the above verbs Hang-Hung-Hung.
BUT when Hang means "to kill someone by putting a rope
around someone's neck and leaving them in a high position without any
support", we use different verbs: Hang-Hanged-hanged. This verb is typical
of public executions in the past. (e.g. They hanged him in the main square.)
** LIE - Lie has two meanings. When it means "to put your body
in a horizontal position" (normally on a bed) it uses the Lie-Lay-Lain
verbs.
BUT it is regular Lie-Lied-Lied when it has the other meaning
of "not to say the truth".
*** READ - Even though they are written the
same, the pronunciation is different in the Past Tense and Past Participle
form.
Part Two
The following verbs can be regular or irregular:
Verb
|
Past Simple
|
Past Participle
|
burn
|
burned
OR burnt
|
burned
OR burnt
|
dream
|
dreamed
OR dreamt
|
dreamed
OR dreamt
|
learn
|
learned
OR learnt
|
learned
OR learnt
|
smell
|
smelled
OR smelt
|
smelled
OR smelt
|
The second form (burnt, dreamt etc.) is more common in
British English.
Part Three
Verbs that have the same form in Present, Past and Past
Participle form:
Verb
|
Past Simple
|
Past Participle
|
bet
|
bet
|
bet
|
broadcast
|
broadcast
|
broadcast
|
cut
|
cut
|
cut
|
hit
|
hit
|
hit
|
hurt
|
hurt
|
hurt
|
let
|
let
|
let
|
put
|
put
|
put
|
quit
|
quit
|
quit
|
read
|
read
|
read
|
set
|
set
|
set
|
shut
|
shut
|
shut
|
spread
|
spread
|
spread
|
Past tense
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
past tense is a grammatical tense whose principal function is to place an
action or situation in past time. In languages which have a past tense, it thus
provides a grammatical means of indicating that the event being referred to
took place in the past. Examples of verbs
in the past tense include the English verbs sang, went and was.
In
some languages, the grammatical expression of past tense is combined with the
expression of other categories such as mood and aspect (see tense–aspect–mood). Thus a language may have several types
of past tense form, their use depending on what aspectual or other additional
information is to be encoded. French, for example, has a compound past (passé
composé) for expressing completed events, an imperfect for expressing events which were ongoing
or repeated in the past, as well as several other past forms.
Some
languages that grammaticalise for past tense do so by inflecting the verb, while others do so periphrastically using auxiliary verbs, also known as "verbal
operators" (and some do both, as in the example of French given above).
Not all languages grammaticalise verbs for past tense – Mandarin Chinese, for example, mainly uses lexical means
(words like "yesterday" or "last week") to indicate that
something took place in the past, although use can also be made of the tense/aspect
markers le and guo.
The
"past time" to which the past tense refers generally means the past
relative to the moment of speaking, although in contexts where relative tense is employed (as in some instances of indirect speech) it may mean the past relative to some
other time being under discussion.[1] A language's past tense may also have
other uses besides referring to past time; for example, in English and certain
other languages, the past tense is sometimes used in referring to hypothetical
situations, such as in condition clauses like If you loved me ..., where
the past tense loved is used even though there may be no connection with
past time.
European languages[edit]
The
European continent is heavily dominated by Indo-European
languages, all of which
have a past tense. In some cases the tense is formed inflectionally as in English see/saw or walk/walked
and as in the French imperfect form, and sometimes it is formed periphrastically, as in the French passé
composé form.
Further, all of the non-Indo-European languages in Europe, such as Basque, Hungarian, and Finnish, also have a past tense.
Germanic languages[edit]
English[edit]
In
English, the past tense (or preterite) is one of the inflected forms of a verb. The past tense of regular verbs is made by adding -d or -ed
to the base form of the verb, while those of irregular
verbs are formed in
various different ways (such as see→saw, go→went, be→was/were). With regular and some irregular verbs,
the past tense form also serves as a past participle. For full details of past tense
formation, see English verbs.
Past
events are often referred to using the present perfect construction, as in I have finished
(also known as present in past). However this is not regarded as an
instance of the past tense; instead it is viewed as a combination of present tense with perfect aspect, specifying a present state that results
from past action.[2] (It can be made into a past tense form
by replacing the auxiliary have with had; see below.)
Various
multi-word constructions exist for combining past tense with progressive (continuous) aspect, which denotes
ongoing action; with perfect aspect; and with progressive and perfect aspects
together. These and other common past tense constructions are listed below.
- The simple past consists of just the past tense (preterite) form of the verb (he walked, they flew, etc.), although when it is negated, emphasized or inverted it is sometimes necessary to unfuse the verb, using a periphrastic construction with did (as in did he walk? etc.) – see do-support. The simple past is used for describing single occurrences or habitual occurrences in the past, and sometimes for states existing in the past.
- The past progressive (past continuous) is formed using the simple past of be (was or were) with the main verb's present participle: He was going. This form indicates that an action was ongoing at the past time under consideration.
- The past perfect combines had (the simple past of have) with the past participle of the main verb: We had shouted. This denotes that an action occurred before a specified time in the past, and therefore has similar function to the pluperfect found in some languages.
- The past perfect progressive combines had (the simple past of have) with been (the past participle of be) and the present participle of the main verb: You had been waiting.
- The expression used to (with the infinitive of the main verb) denotes a past habitual situation (I used to play football when I was young), although with a stative verb it can just indicate that a state was continuously in effect (I used to belong to that club). It is often used to emphasize that something is no longer the case. Another way of referring to past habitual action is to use would, as in As a child I would play the piano every day, although this auxiliary has other uses as well. For further details see English modal verbs.
For
details of the usage of the various constructions used to refer to the past,
see Uses
of English verb forms.
Note that the past tense is also used in referring to some hypothetical
situations, not necessarily connected with past time, as in if I tried
or I wish I knew. (For the possible use of were in place of was
in such instances, see English
subjunctive.)
German[edit]
German uses two forms for the past tense.
- The preterite (Präteritum) (called the "imperfect" in older grammar books, but this, a borrowing from Latin terminology, ill describes it.)
- The perfect (Perfekt)
In
southern Germany, Austria and Switzerland, the preterite is mostly used solely in
writing, for example in stories. Use in speech is regarded as snobbish and thus
very uncommon. South German dialects, such as the Bavarian dialect, as well as Yiddish, and Swiss German have no preterite, but only perfect
constructs.
In
certain regions, a few specific verbs are used in the preterite, for instance
the modal verbs and the verbs haben (have) and sein (be).
- Es gab einmal ein kleines Mädchen, das Rotkäppchen hieß. (There was once a small girl who was called Little Red Riding Hood.)
In
speech and informal writing, the Perfekt is used (e.g., Ich habe
dies und das gesagt. (I said this and that)).
However,
in the oral mode of North Germany, there is still a very important difference between
the preterite and the perfect, and both tenses are consequently very common. The
preterite is used for past actions when the focus is on the action, whilst the
present perfect is used for past actions when the focus is on the present state
of the subject as a result of a previous action. This is somewhat similar to
the English usage of the preterite and the present perfect.
- Preterite: "Heute früh kam mein Freund." (my friend came early in the morning, and he is being talked about strictly in the past)
- Perfect: "Heute früh ist mein Freund gekommen." (my friend came early in the morning, but he is being talked about in the present)
Dutch[edit]
Dutch mainly uses these two past tenses:
- onvoltooid verleden tijd, which matches the English simple past and the German preterite, for example: Gisteren was ik daar ("I was there yesterday").
- voltooid tegenwoordige tijd, a present tense with the meaning of perfect. This form is made by combining a form of zijn ("to be") or hebben ("to have") with the notional verb, for example: Gisteren ben ik daar geweest. This also means "I was there yesterday", but just as it is the case for English constructions with the present perfect simple, this kind of formulation puts more emphasis on the "being finished"-aspect.
Less
common is the voltooid verleden tijd, which corresponds to the English
past perfect. It is formed by combining an onvoltooid verleden form of zijn
("to be") or hebben ("to have") with the notional
verb, for example: Ik was daar voor gisteren al geweest.
This means "I had been there before yesterday." This tense is used to
indicate that one action in the past occurred before another past action, and
that the action was fully finished before the second action took place.
Other Indo-European languages[edit]
In
non-Germanic Indo-European
languages, past marking
is typically combined with a distinction between perfective and imperfective aspect, with the former reserved for
single completed actions in the past. French for instance, has an imperfect tense form similar to that
of German but used only for past habitual or past progressive contexts like
"I used to..." or "I was doing...". Similar patterns extend
across most languages of the Indo-European family right through to the Indic languages.
Unlike
other Indo-European languages, in Slavic languages tense is independent of aspect, with imperfective and perfective aspects being indicated instead by means
of prefixes, stem changes, or suppletion. In many West
Slavic and East
Slavic languages, the early
Slavic past tenses have
largely merged into a single past tense. In both West and East Slavic, verbs in
the past tense are conjugated for gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and number (singular, plural).
French[edit]
French has numerous forms of the past tense including but not
limited to:
- Past perfective (passé composé) e.g. J'ai mangé (I ate, using the form but not the meaning of I have eaten)
- Past imperfective (imparfait) e.g. Je mangeais (I was eating)
- Past historic or Simple past (passé simple) e.g. Je mangeai (I ate) (literary only)
- Pluperfect (Plus que parfait) e.g. J'avais mangé (I had eaten [before another event in the past])
- Recent past (passé recent) e.g. Je viens de manger (I just ate)
African languages[edit]
Whilst
in Semitic
languages tripartite
non-past/past imperfective/past perfective systems similar to those of most
Indo-European languages are found, in the rest of Africa past tenses have very
different forms from those found in European languages. Berber languages have only the perfective/imperfective
distinction and lack a past imperfect.
Many
non-Bantu Niger–Congo
languages of West Africa
do not mark past tense at all but instead have a form of perfect derived from a word meaning "to
finish". Others, such as Ewe, distinguish only between future and non-future.
In
complete contrast, Bantu
languages such as Zulu have not only a past tense, but also a less remote proximal
tense which is used for very recent past events and is never interchangeable
with the ordinary past form. These languages also differ substantially from European
languages in coding tense with prefixes
instead of such suffixes as English -ed.
Other,
smaller language families of Africa follow quite regional patterns. Thus the Sudanic languages of East Africa and adjacent Afro-Asiatic
families are part of the same area with inflectional past-marking that extends
into Europe, whereas more westerly Nilo-Saharan languages often do not have
past tense.
Asian languages[edit]
Past
tenses are found in a variety of Asian languages. These include the
Indo-European languages Russian in North Asia and Persian, Tajik, Urdu, and Hindi in Southwest and South Asia; the Turkic languages Turkish, Turkmen, Kazakh, and Uyghur of Southwest and Central Asia; Arabic in Southwest Asia; Japanese; the Dravidian
languages of India; the Uralic languages of Russia; Mongolic; and Korean. Languages in East Asia and Southeast Asia typically do not distinguish tense; in Mandarin Chinese, for example, the particle 了le when used immediately after a verb
instead indicates perfective aspect.
In
parts of islands in Southeast Asia, even less distinction is made, for instance
in Indonesian and some other Austronesian
languages. Past tenses,
do, however, exist in most Oceanic languages.
The Americas[edit]
Among
Native
American languages there
is a split between complete absence of past marking (especially common in
Mesoamerica and the Pacific Northwest) and very complex tense marking with
numerous specialised remoteness distinctions, as found for instance in Athabaskan
languages and a few
languages of the Amazon Basin. Some of these tenses can have specialised
mythological significance and uses.
A
number of Native American languages like Northern Paiute stand in contrast to
European notions of tense because they always use relative tense, which means time relative to a
reference point that may not coincide with the time an utterance is made.
New Guinea[edit]
Papuan languages of New Guinea almost always have
remoteness distinctions in the past tense (though none are as elaborate as some
native American languages), whilst indigenous
Australian languages
usually have a single past tense without remoteness distinctions.
Creole languages[edit]
Creole languages tend to make tense marking optional, and
when tense is marked invariant pre-verbal markers are used.[3]
Belizean Creole[edit]
In
Belizean
Creole, past tense
marking is optional and is rarely used if a semantic temporal marker such as yestudeh
"yesterday" is present.
Singaporean English Creole[edit]
Singaporean
English Creole (Singlish) optionally marks the past tense, most
often in irregular verbs (e.g., go → went) and regular verbs like accept which
require an extra syllable for the past tense suffix -ed.
Hawaiian Creole English[edit]
Hawaiian
Creole English[4] optionally marks the past tense with the
invariant pre-verbal marker wen or bin (especially older
speakers) or haed (especially on the island Kauai). (Ai wen si om
"I saw him"; Ai bin klin ap mai ples for da halade "I cleaned
up my place for the holiday"; De haed plei BYU laes wik "They
played BYU last week"). The past habitual marker is yustu (Yo
mada yustu tink so "Your mother used to think so").
Haitian Creole[edit]
Haitian Creole[5] can indicate past tense with the
pre-verbal marker te (Li te vini "He (past) come",
"He came").
Past tense
The
past tense is a grammatical tense whose principal function is to place an
action or situation in past time. In languages which have a past tense, it thus
provides a grammatical means of indicating that the event being referred to
took place in the past. Examples of verbs
in the past tense include the English verbs sang, went and was.
In
some languages, the grammatical expression of past tense is combined with the
expression of other categories such as mood and aspect (see tense–aspect–mood). Thus a language may have several types
of past tense form, their use depending on what aspectual or other additional
information is to be encoded. French, for example, has a compound past (passé
composé) for expressing completed events, an imperfect for expressing events which were ongoing
or repeated in the past, as well as several other past forms.
Some
languages that grammaticalise for past tense do so by inflecting the verb, while others do so periphrastically using auxiliary verbs, also known as "verbal
operators" (and some do both, as in the example of French given above).
Not all languages grammaticalise verbs for past tense – Mandarin Chinese, for example, mainly uses lexical means
(words like "yesterday" or "last week") to indicate that
something took place in the past, although use can also be made of the tense/aspect
markers le and guo.
The
"past time" to which the past tense refers generally means the past
relative to the moment of speaking, although in contexts where relative tense is employed (as in some instances of indirect speech) it may mean the past relative to some
other time being under discussion.[1] A language's past tense may also have
other uses besides referring to past time; for example, in English and certain
other languages, the past tense is sometimes used in referring to hypothetical
situations, such as in condition clauses like If you loved me ..., where
the past tense loved is used even though there may be no connection with
past time.
European languages[edit]
The
European continent is heavily dominated by Indo-European
languages, all of which
have a past tense. In some cases the tense is formed inflectionally as in English see/saw or walk/walked
and as in the French imperfect form, and sometimes it is formed periphrastically, as in the French passé
composé form.
Further, all of the non-Indo-European languages in Europe, such as Basque, Hungarian, and Finnish, also have a past tense.
Germanic languages[edit]
English[edit]
In
English, the past tense (or preterite) is one of the inflected forms of a verb. The past tense of regular verbs is made by adding -d or -ed
to the base form of the verb, while those of irregular
verbs are formed in
various different ways (such as see→saw, go→went, be→was/were). With regular and some irregular verbs,
the past tense form also serves as a past participle. For full details of past tense
formation, see English verbs.
Past
events are often referred to using the present perfect construction, as in I have finished
(also known as present in past). However this is not regarded as an
instance of the past tense; instead it is viewed as a combination of present tense with perfect aspect, specifying a present state that results
from past action.[2] (It can be made into a past tense form
by replacing the auxiliary have with had; see below.)
Various
multi-word constructions exist for combining past tense with progressive (continuous) aspect, which denotes
ongoing action; with perfect aspect; and with progressive and perfect aspects
together. These and other common past tense constructions are listed below.
- The simple past consists of just the past tense (preterite) form of the verb (he walked, they flew, etc.), although when it is negated, emphasized or inverted it is sometimes necessary to unfuse the verb, using a periphrastic construction with did (as in did he walk? etc.) – see do-support. The simple past is used for describing single occurrences or habitual occurrences in the past, and sometimes for states existing in the past.
- The past progressive (past continuous) is formed using the simple past of be (was or were) with the main verb's present participle: He was going. This form indicates that an action was ongoing at the past time under consideration.
- The past perfect combines had (the simple past of have) with the past participle of the main verb: We had shouted. This denotes that an action occurred before a specified time in the past, and therefore has similar function to the pluperfect found in some languages.
- The past perfect progressive combines had (the simple past of have) with been (the past participle of be) and the present participle of the main verb: You had been waiting.
- The expression used to (with the infinitive of the main verb) denotes a past habitual situation (I used to play football when I was young), although with a stative verb it can just indicate that a state was continuously in effect (I used to belong to that club). It is often used to emphasize that something is no longer the case. Another way of referring to past habitual action is to use would, as in As a child I would play the piano every day, although this auxiliary has other uses as well. For further details see English modal verbs.
For
details of the usage of the various constructions used to refer to the past,
see Uses
of English verb forms.
Note that the past tense is also used in referring to some hypothetical
situations, not necessarily connected with past time, as in if I tried
or I wish I knew. (For the possible use of were in place of was
in such instances, see English
subjunctive.)
German[edit]
German uses two forms for the past tense.
- The preterite (Präteritum) (called the "imperfect" in older grammar books, but this, a borrowing from Latin terminology, ill describes it.)
- The perfect (Perfekt)
In
southern Germany, Austria and Switzerland, the preterite is mostly used solely in
writing, for example in stories. Use in speech is regarded as snobbish and thus
very uncommon. South German dialects, such as the Bavarian dialect, as well as Yiddish, and Swiss German have no preterite, but only perfect
constructs.
In
certain regions, a few specific verbs are used in the preterite, for instance
the modal verbs and the verbs haben (have) and sein (be).
- Es gab einmal ein kleines Mädchen, das Rotkäppchen hieß. (There was once a small girl who was called Little Red Riding Hood.)
In
speech and informal writing, the Perfekt is used (e.g., Ich habe
dies und das gesagt. (I said this and that)).
However,
in the oral mode of North Germany, there is still a very important difference between
the preterite and the perfect, and both tenses are consequently very common. The
preterite is used for past actions when the focus is on the action, whilst the
present perfect is used for past actions when the focus is on the present state
of the subject as a result of a previous action. This is somewhat similar to
the English usage of the preterite and the present perfect.
- Preterite: "Heute früh kam mein Freund." (my friend came early in the morning, and he is being talked about strictly in the past)
- Perfect: "Heute früh ist mein Freund gekommen." (my friend came early in the morning, but he is being talked about in the present)
Dutch[edit]
Dutch mainly uses these two past tenses:
- onvoltooid verleden tijd, which matches the English simple past and the German preterite, for example: Gisteren was ik daar ("I was there yesterday").
- voltooid tegenwoordige tijd, a present tense with the meaning of perfect. This form is made by combining a form of zijn ("to be") or hebben ("to have") with the notional verb, for example: Gisteren ben ik daar geweest. This also means "I was there yesterday", but just as it is the case for English constructions with the present perfect simple, this kind of formulation puts more emphasis on the "being finished"-aspect.
Less
common is the voltooid verleden tijd, which corresponds to the English
past perfect. It is formed by combining an onvoltooid verleden form of zijn
("to be") or hebben ("to have") with the notional
verb, for example: Ik was daar voor gisteren al geweest.
This means "I had been there before yesterday." This tense is used to
indicate that one action in the past occurred before another past action, and
that the action was fully finished before the second action took place.
Other Indo-European languages[edit]
In
non-Germanic Indo-European
languages, past marking
is typically combined with a distinction between perfective and imperfective aspect, with the former reserved for
single completed actions in the past. French for instance, has an imperfect tense form similar to that
of German but used only for past habitual or past progressive contexts like
"I used to..." or "I was doing...". Similar patterns extend
across most languages of the Indo-European family right through to the Indic languages.
Unlike
other Indo-European languages, in Slavic languages tense is independent of aspect, with imperfective and perfective aspects being indicated instead by means
of prefixes, stem changes, or suppletion. In many West
Slavic and East
Slavic languages, the early
Slavic past tenses have
largely merged into a single past tense. In both West and East Slavic, verbs in
the past tense are conjugated for gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and number (singular, plural).
French[edit]
French has numerous forms of the past tense including but not
limited to:
- Past perfective (passé composé) e.g. J'ai mangé (I ate, using the form but not the meaning of I have eaten)
- Past imperfective (imparfait) e.g. Je mangeais (I was eating)
- Past historic or Simple past (passé simple) e.g. Je mangeai (I ate) (literary only)
- Pluperfect (Plus que parfait) e.g. J'avais mangé (I had eaten [before another event in the past])
- Recent past (passé recent) e.g. Je viens de manger (I just ate)
African languages[edit]
Whilst
in Semitic
languages tripartite non-past/past
imperfective/past perfective systems similar to those of most Indo-European
languages are found, in the rest of Africa past tenses have very different
forms from those found in European languages. Berber languages have only the perfective/imperfective
distinction and lack a past imperfect.
Many
non-Bantu Niger–Congo
languages of West Africa
do not mark past tense at all but instead have a form of perfect derived from a word meaning "to
finish". Others, such as Ewe, distinguish only between future and non-future.
In
complete contrast, Bantu
languages such as Zulu have not only a past tense, but also a less remote proximal
tense which is used for very recent past events and is never interchangeable
with the ordinary past form. These languages also differ substantially from European
languages in coding tense with prefixes
instead of such suffixes as English -ed.
Other,
smaller language families of Africa follow quite regional patterns. Thus the Sudanic languages of East Africa and adjacent Afro-Asiatic
families are part of the same area with inflectional past-marking that extends
into Europe, whereas more westerly Nilo-Saharan languages often do not have
past tense.
Asian languages[edit]
Past
tenses are found in a variety of Asian languages. These include the
Indo-European languages Russian in North Asia and Persian, Tajik, Urdu, and Hindi in Southwest and South Asia; the Turkic languages Turkish, Turkmen, Kazakh, and Uyghur of Southwest and Central Asia; Arabic in Southwest Asia; Japanese; the Dravidian
languages of India; the Uralic languages of Russia; Mongolic; and Korean. Languages in East Asia and Southeast Asia typically do not distinguish tense; in Mandarin Chinese, for example, the particle 了le when used immediately after a verb
instead indicates perfective aspect.
In
parts of islands in Southeast Asia, even less distinction is made, for instance
in Indonesian and some other Austronesian
languages. Past tenses,
do, however, exist in most Oceanic languages.
The Americas[edit]
Among
Native
American languages there
is a split between complete absence of past marking (especially common in
Mesoamerica and the Pacific Northwest) and very complex tense marking with
numerous specialised remoteness distinctions, as found for instance in Athabaskan
languages and a few
languages of the Amazon Basin. Some of these tenses can have specialised
mythological significance and uses.
A
number of Native American languages like Northern Paiute stand in contrast to
European notions of tense because they always use relative tense, which means time relative to a
reference point that may not coincide with the time an utterance is made.
New Guinea[edit]
Papuan languages of New Guinea almost always have
remoteness distinctions in the past tense (though none are as elaborate as some
native American languages), whilst indigenous
Australian languages
usually have a single past tense without remoteness distinctions.
Creole languages[edit]
Creole languages tend to make tense marking optional, and
when tense is marked invariant pre-verbal markers are used.[3]
Belizean Creole[edit]
In
Belizean
Creole, past tense
marking is optional and is rarely used if a semantic temporal marker such as yestudeh
"yesterday" is present.
Singaporean English Creole[edit]
Singaporean
English Creole (Singlish) optionally marks the past tense, most
often in irregular verbs (e.g., go → went) and regular verbs like accept which
require an extra syllable for the past tense suffix -ed.
Hawaiian Creole English[edit]
Hawaiian
Creole English[4] optionally marks the past tense with the
invariant pre-verbal marker wen or bin (especially older
speakers) or haed (especially on the island Kauai). (Ai wen si om
"I saw him"; Ai bin klin ap mai ples for da halade "I cleaned
up my place for the holiday"; De haed plei BYU laes wik "They
played BYU last week"). The past habitual marker is yustu (Yo
mada yustu tink so "Your mother used to think so").
Haitian Creole[edit]
Haitian Creole[5] can indicate past tense with the
pre-verbal marker te (Li te vini "He (past) come",
"He came").
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