The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa

The present corpus study aims to investigate the semantics of the perfective and the imperfective aspects in Xhosa. In a large number of studies that investigate tense and aspect in the Nguni languages, the observations are mostly based on invented, context-free sentences which do not necessarily re...

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Main Author: Savić, Stefan
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2017-12-01
Series:Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/713
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author Savić, Stefan
author_facet Savić, Stefan
author_sort Savić, Stefan
collection DOAJ
description The present corpus study aims to investigate the semantics of the perfective and the imperfective aspects in Xhosa. In a large number of studies that investigate tense and aspect in the Nguni languages, the observations are mostly based on invented, context-free sentences which do not necessarily reflect the complex semantics of these two categories. The data in the present study comes from corpora, thus allowing to test a hypothesis with examples from the natural language use. At the same time, the instances that cannot be accounted for with that hypothesis provide evidence for its improvement. The present study tests the view that the perfective aspect denotes an eventuality which is conceived of as ‘bounded’ or as an ‘indivisible whole’, and that the imperfective aspect represents an eventuality as ‘durative’ or ‘iterated’. The data collected in this study consists of recent past perfective and imperfective verbs which are tested for the possibility to hold true at more than one point in time. The underlying assumption is that, unlike the ‘durative’ and ‘iterated’ ones, the ‘bounded’ events cannot hold true at more than just one point in time. The results show that perfective/imperfective opposition in Xhosa correlates to a large extent with the view of an eventuality as bounded. However, a significant number of the analysed verbs cannot be accounted for with this explanation. The choice of aspect in those cases points toward other factors, such as factuality, number of occurrences, information structure, and sequencing of eventualities.
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spelling doaj.art-c13aa34fb3be473bba6721a17b20ad972022-12-21T22:21:07ZafrStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus1726-541X2224-33802017-12-01520457210.5842/52-0-713The perfective and imperfective aspects in XhosaSavić, Stefan 0Rhodes University, South AfricaThe present corpus study aims to investigate the semantics of the perfective and the imperfective aspects in Xhosa. In a large number of studies that investigate tense and aspect in the Nguni languages, the observations are mostly based on invented, context-free sentences which do not necessarily reflect the complex semantics of these two categories. The data in the present study comes from corpora, thus allowing to test a hypothesis with examples from the natural language use. At the same time, the instances that cannot be accounted for with that hypothesis provide evidence for its improvement. The present study tests the view that the perfective aspect denotes an eventuality which is conceived of as ‘bounded’ or as an ‘indivisible whole’, and that the imperfective aspect represents an eventuality as ‘durative’ or ‘iterated’. The data collected in this study consists of recent past perfective and imperfective verbs which are tested for the possibility to hold true at more than one point in time. The underlying assumption is that, unlike the ‘durative’ and ‘iterated’ ones, the ‘bounded’ events cannot hold true at more than just one point in time. The results show that perfective/imperfective opposition in Xhosa correlates to a large extent with the view of an eventuality as bounded. However, a significant number of the analysed verbs cannot be accounted for with this explanation. The choice of aspect in those cases points toward other factors, such as factuality, number of occurrences, information structure, and sequencing of eventualities.https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/713grammatical aspectboundariesxhosa
spellingShingle Savić, Stefan
The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
grammatical aspect
boundaries
xhosa
title The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
title_full The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
title_fullStr The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
title_full_unstemmed The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
title_short The perfective and imperfective aspects in Xhosa
title_sort perfective and imperfective aspects in xhosa
topic grammatical aspect
boundaries
xhosa
url https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/713
work_keys_str_mv AT savicstefan theperfectiveandimperfectiveaspectsinxhosa
AT savicstefan perfectiveandimperfectiveaspectsinxhosa