Iranian Persian and Tajik/Verb moods and aspects

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Revision as of 10:24, 16 September 2008 by Soroush (talk | contribs) (→‎Past: Preterite)
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This article is about verbs and their moods and aspects in Persian.

Tenses

Each verb has two roots(Present and Past)

Present

Verb stem in Present tense can be counted impretive in singular form like:(rov, gu, ...)

Present verb is made like the following:

  • stem + conjucation(am,i,-,im,id,and)
  • mi+stem+conjucation
  1. The first form of verb is in the form that makes the verb dubious or conditional:(This aspect is called "eltezami" in Persian meaning "getting required")
beravam ya naravam(expresses a doubt: "Don't know wether to go")
khahi nashavi(conditional: "if you don't want to become")
in Apertium: '
  • This mood usually gets "be" or "na" behind itself
  1. The second form has another aspect. it is indicative(in Persian "ekhbari" and meaning "giving news)
s tag in dictionaries Apertium: ind

Past

Past tense can have 5 moods:

  • Simple: stem + conjucation (in Persian: Saadeh) - in Apertium::'
This is the present form of the second kind of present


  • contineous: mi+stem+conjucation (in Persian: Estemrari) - in Apertium::'
e.g. : miraft : it was going
  • ?: stem+'eh'+astan(after conjucating) (in Persian: Naqli : en:quoting) - in Apertium::'
    • This is usuallly used when you quote sth from sb or you want to explain sth has been done. It is usually translated to present perfect or simple past in English.
  • ?(Far): stem+'eh'+bud+conjucation (in Persian: ba'id meaning so far) - in Apertium::'
    • This describes things have been done farther in past tense. it is farther than the last item in the tense. in English it is usually past perfect. It can be the past form for the first preset tense i've described above in Persian esp. in conditional sentences.
  • ?(fa:Eltezami): stem+'eh'+bash+conjucation - in Apertium::Preterite
    • used when you want to describe a probable or dubious or conditional situaion
      • eg. rafteh bashad ya nabashad (either has has gone or he hasn't)
      • eg. agar rafteh bashad ( if he has gone)
      • eg. ager rafteh bashi ( if you have already gone)