Citations:Aktionsart

English citations of Aktionsart and aktionsart

  • 1891, University of Michigan, “The Philological Society”, in The University Record, page 101:
    Modality (German Aktionsart) of verbs is usually divided into (1) perfective, expressing the reaching of an end (German ersteigen, momentary perfective; besteigen, durative perfective);
  • 1910, Max L. Margolis, “Complete Induction for the Identification of the Vocabulary in the Greek Versions of the Old Testament with Its Semitic Equivalents”, in Journal of the American Oriental Society[1], page 311:
    The Greek compounds often serve merely to mark the “Aktionsart”.
  • 1999, Nadezhda Bulatova, Lenore Grenoble, Evenki (Languages of the World/Materials 141), →ISBN (13), LINCOM Europa, →ISBN:
    Nouns inflect for case, number and possession; Standard Evenki has 12 cases. The verbal system morphologically marks tense, mood, person and number, aspect and Aktionsarten as well as voice.
  • 2013, I-Hsuan Chen, “The semantic constraints on the verb +zhe nouns in Mandarin Chinese”, in Zhuo Jing-Schmidt, editor, Increased Empiricism: Recent Advances in Chinese Linguistics, page 203:
    Although different aktionsarts result in a salient distinction in productivity, based on the examples we have gone through so far, it is notable that the verb +zhe nouns adhere to the three semantic constraints.