English edit

Etymology edit

Neologism created from Latin fierī (to happen, become) on the pattern of words like stative, durative, iterative, causative.

Adjective edit

fientive (not comparable)

  1. (grammar, Semitic linguistics) designating a durative and dynamic action performed by the subject
    • 1977, Haiim B. Rosén, Contemporary Hebrew, page 182:
      This underlines again that a contrast of nominality versus verbality conveys a stative versus fientive purport.
  2. (grammar, Indo-European linguistics) designating entering into a state as opposed to being in a state
    • 2007, George Hinge, “The Proto-Indo-European essive and fientive in Greek”, in glossa.dk[1], archived from the original on 29-07-2023:
      The basic idea is that what previous scholarship categorised as a stative, viz. the various forms going back to a derivation with a long ē, is in fact a fientive, i.e. it designates the becoming and not the being.