home edit page issue tracker

This page pertains to UD version 2.

Tense: tense

Values: Imp Past Pres

Tense is a feature that specifies the time when the action took / takes / will take place, in relation to a reference point. The reference is often the moment of producing the sentence, but it can be also another event in the context.

Armenian has a complex tense/aspect/mood system.

Note, that we are defining features that apply to a single word. If a tense is constructed periphrastically (two words, e.g. auxiliary verb indicative + participle of the main verb), and none of the participating words are specific to this tense, then the features will probably not directly reveal the tense.

Actions that happened before, during, and after a past or present event are constructed in Armenian by using perfect, resultative, imperfective and future participles.

Note, that actions that happen before or during a future event are expressed using an auxiliary. Imperfect or present finite form of auxilariy in periphrastic future (accompanied by future participle of main verb) is tagged Tense=Imp or Tense=Pres accordingly, not Tense=Fut, while there will be an aspect (Aspect=Prosp) information at the participle (e.g. վազելու էի տուն  “I should run home” or վազելու եմ տուն  “I shall run home”).

Note also, that there is an elaborate system of parallel tense/aspect/mood forms (traditionally called “secondary compound tenses”) formed periphrastically by forms of the auxiliary լինեմ  and the resultative, processual and future-I participles of the main verb. They express actions that happened before, during, and after past or present reference. For these periphrastical forms we use Tense=Imp or Tense=Pres with perfect (Perf), progressive (Prog) or prospective (Prosp) aspect.

Past: past tense / aorist

The past tense denotes actions that happened before a reference point. The reference point is the moment of producing the sentence and the (completed) past event happened before the speaker speaks about it. In Armenian this is aorist.

Examples

Imp: imperfect

Imperfect is a special case of the past tense. It denotes actions that are happening during some past moment. These actions might continue after the moment of speaking, but also might not, i.e. the evidence is not in the form itself, but it is in the context.

Note, that a limited set of verbs (գիտեմ, ունեմ, արժեմ) form imperfect and present morphologically with unmarked vs. marked stems (traditionally called “Defective Verbs with Secondary Expanded Stems”). The difference between them are related also to Mood and Aspect rather than Tense. The verbs with unmarked (“non-expanded”) stems will have Tense=Imp and Tense=Pres in indicative mood.

Examples

Pres: present tense

The present tense denotes actions that are in progress (or states that are valid) in a reference point; it may also describe events that usually happen. In the prototypical case, the reference point is the moment of producing the sentence.

Present forms of verbs in subjunctive, conditional and necessitative moods have future meaning. These forms are tagged Tense=Pres not Tense=Fut as in traditional grammars.

Examples


Tense in other languages: [ab] [abq] [aqz] [arr] [bej] [bg] [bm] [cs] [cy] [el] [en] [es] [fi] [fr] [ga] [gn] [gub] [ha] [hu] [hy] [it] [jaa] [ka] [ky] [pcm] [ps] [qpm] [ru] [sah] [say] [sl] [sv] [tr] [tt] [u] [uk] [urb] [urj] [xcl]