How To Use Aoristic In A Sentence
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The aoristic present presents the action as a simple event or as a present fact without any reference to its progress.
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In Latin, perfective and aoristic semantics fused in the perfect, leaving the perfect and imperfect stems.
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This "past tense" you are referring to is actually the aorist tense, which in most moods of the non-participle forms, would carry a meaning of past time with aoristic aspect.
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It differs from the aoristic past tense (35) and from the imperfect (113) by expressing an act or condition as definitely completed or perfected.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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Compound tenses occur less often in Esperanto than in English, and an aoristic Esperanto tense may often be translated by an English compound tense, as "La birdoj flugas", the birds are flying.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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In addition to the aoristic tense, the conditional mood has three active and three passive compound tenses, formed by combining the participles with the aoristic tense of "esti" in the conditional mood.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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The compound tenses formed by combining the future passive participle with each of the three aoristic tenses of "esti" represent an act or condition as "about to be undergone" in the present, past, or future, respectively.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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The compound tenses formed by combining the future active participle with each of the three aoristic tenses of "esti" represent an act or state as about to occur in the present, past, or future, respectively, and are called "periphrastic future tenses.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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But since, in the historical periods of the language, action in progress in past time is expressed by the Imperfect, and the Future is used both as a progressive and as an aoristic tense for future time, it results that the Present Indicative is chiefly used to express action in progress in present time.
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She caught at the nerves like certain aoristic combinations in music, like tones of a stringed instrument swept by the wind, enticing, unseizable.
Beauchamp's Career — Complete
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Beside the aoristic tense, six compound tenses are formed by combining the participles with the imperative mood "estu" of the auxiliary verb, but these tenses are seldom used.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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The conjugation of "vidi" in the aoristic tense of the conditional mood is as follows: mi vidus, I should see. vi vidus, you would see. li (sxi, gxi) vidus, he (she, it) would see. ni vidus, we should see. vi vidus, you would see. ili vidus, they would see.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto
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Perfect can be completed aspect in present time or aoristic aspect in past time.
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It differs from the aoristic present by expressing an action as definitely in progress, or a condition as continuously existing, at the moment of speaking.
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto