| 31. | A few archaisms still used ( aorist in the perfective aspect 1KABL'was').
|
| 32. | The aorist participle may be used where the action is completed, called the perfective aspect.
|
| 33. | The second is the punctual aspect ( PUNC ) ( also known as perfective aspect ).
|
| 34. | Today, for example, Israel s acts against Palestinians demonstrate perfective exemplifications of state terrorism.
|
| 35. | Purely artificial art only changes nature superficially, whereas perfective art changes the essence of nature.
|
| 36. | Farmers too, practice perfective art since they work with the transmutation power inherent in seeds.
|
| 37. | Modern Greek distinguishes the perfective and imperfective aspects by the use of two different verb stems.
|
| 38. | They are mono-aspectual, i . e ., they have no perfective equivalents.
|
| 39. | Furthermore, Sahil and Southeastern dialects tend to use in place of in the perfective conjugation.
|
| 40. | Verbal roots were inherently imperfective ( durative, present ) or perfective ( punctual, aoristic ).
|