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Verb forms in various languages and in DZ Interset

This is not a complete list of verbal tenses found in all languages. It focuses on tenses that are expressed synthetically, i.e. using affixes in one word (as opposed to analytical expression, using combination of a main verb and an auxiliary verb). Morphological / part-of-speech tags usually only need to distinguish synthetical verb forms.

Arabic imperfect verb, perfect verb; mood: indicative, subjunctive, subjunctive/jussive; voice: passive; infinitive
Bulgarian nonpersonal verb (has 3rd person only), perfective vs. imperfective verb, auxiliary verb; transitive vs. intransitive verb; mood: indicative, imperative, subjunctive; tense: present, past, aorist, imperfect; participle, transgressive; voice: active, passive
Czech infinitive, indicative (present, future), imperative, subjunctive, active past participle, passive participle
Danish main verb, medial verb (deponent, reciprocal), mood: gerund, imperative, indicative, infinitive, participle; tense: past, present; voice: active, passive
English modal verb, main verb; base form (infinitive but without “to”), gerund/present participle, past participle, non 3rd person singular present, 3rd person singular present
German auxiliary verb, modal verb, main verb; finite (indicative), imperative, infinitive, infinitive with “zu”, perfect participle
Portuguese infinitive, indicative, imperative, subjunctive, conditional, present, past, pluperfect
Swedish indicative, imperative, subjunctive, infinitive; present, past, supine; active, passive

Infinitive

Usually considered base form of the verb, appears in dictionaries. In text it appears as part of analytical verb forms and as argument of other words:

In some languages infinitive is marked by verb affixes:

In some languages, the morpheme marking infinitive is separate word (English to). In English, the base form of the verb is not (full) infinitive. It becomes infinitive when combined with the infinitive mark (to do, to say). Without the mark, it can be used (in English) as imperative.

Both approaches can be combined. Although infinitives are recognizable by the -en suffix in German, the infinitive mark zu is used with infinitives in some contexts. Depending on the verb, zu is either a separate word, or a morpheme inserted between the verb prefix and stem (zu beenden vs. anzupassen).

In DZ Interset, infinitive is decoded as verbform = inf. This value is set even for the English base verb form, although it is not certain whether the form is used as infinitive, or imperative. Mood, tense and voice are usually empty. Czech infinitives set the feature negativeness. Portuguese infinitives can be mildly conjugated. I think I may have seen active/passive infinitives but I am not sure where.

Finite

Finite verb forms are those most frequently used. They are classified according to mood: the most ordinary mood is indicative, most languages also have imperative, some also have subjunctive and jussive.

Opposed to finite verbs are non-finite verb forms, namely infinitive, supine, participle, transgressive and gerund.

In DZ Interset, finite verb form is decoded as verbform = fin.

Indicative

Verbs in indicative mood merely indicate that someone performs / has performed / will perform the action of the verb. Opposed to indicative is imperative (the verb orders the listener to perform the action) and various conditional constructions (the action would be performed if…)

There is a multitude of indicative verb forms, classified according to tense (present, past, future etc.) and voice (active or passive). Present active forms are the default. They are usually the simplest, formed synthetically. Other tenses and voices are formed synthetically or analytically, depending on language.

In DZ Interset, indicative is decoded as mood = ind. This is also the default mood value for finite verb forms. (For non-finite verb forms, default mood is empty.)


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