African American Vernacular English/Verbs/Aspect
Aspect in English is similar to tense. Linguistics use the term "Tense-Aspect-Modality" or TAM to describe the three rules which make up so-called verb "tenses." Generally:
- Tense is used to say what point in time something happened.
- Aspect is used to say how something happens: how often something happens, and whether it has been completed.
- Modality is the truth value of how likely something happened: declarative, subjunctive, conditional, imperative. However questions and negation are generally not considered part of modality.
Aspect in General English
[edit | edit source]English, or at least most prestige varieties of English are generally understood to have four aspects: 1) simple, 2) continuous, 3) perfective, and 4) perfective continuous, as well as three tenses (past, present, future), and a wide variety of modalities formed by modal verbs, plus the subjunctive and imperative.
- Done repeatedly up until the present: I walk (an hour) to work (every day).
- In the process of being done in the present, or to be completed in the near future: I am walking to work (right now). I'm arriving in an hour.
- Done at least once in the past: I have walked to work (a few times).
- Done up until the present, possibly repeated, possibly finished: I have been walking for an hour (and I'm still walking). I have been walking to work (every day since my car broke down, but now it's fixed).
AAVE, by contrast, has different markers for each of these.
Aspect in AAVE
[edit | edit source]Done
[edit | edit source]"Done" in AAVE is a perfective marker, used to mean that an action has been completed.
- He done walked here. = He just walked here.
Been
[edit | edit source]"Been" is used in AAVE to indicate that an action has been going on or repeated for a while. In this, it is unlike the MAE auxiliary "has," which can mean it happened and continued to the present, or that it has happened frequently.
- He been walking. = He has been walking frequently.
Note that an adverb of time can only indicate how long something happens, and not how often. Sentences marked with strikethrough are ungrammatical and semantically nonsense.
- He been walking two hours. = He's been walking two hours, every day.
He been walking every week.- He walk every week. = He walks every week.
BIN
[edit | edit source]BIN, which is stressed, is used similarly to "been," however it indicates that the action was completed. Thus:
- He been walking. = He has been walking, often, for a while.
- He BIN walking. = He has been walking, but has stopped.
In this way, the stressed "BIN" is similar to the MAE example:
- He was walking (earlier).
- He WAS walking (but he has stopped).