Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A form of a verb in some languages, such as Classical Greek, that expresses action without indicating its completion or continuation.
- noun A form of a verb in some languages, such as Classical Greek or Sanskrit, that in the indicative mood expresses past action.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun In grammar, a tense of the Greek verb expressing action (in the indicative, past action) without further limitation or implication; hence, also, a tense of like form or like signification in other languages, as the Sanskrit.
- Indefinite with respect to time.
- Pertaining or similar to the aorist.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Gram.) A tense in the Greek language, which expresses an action as completed in past time, but leaves it, in other respects, wholly indeterminate.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun grammar A
verb in the aorist past, that is, in thepast tense and theaorist aspect (the event described by the verb viewed as a completed whole). Also called the perfective past. The nearest equivalent in English is thesimple past . The term aorist is used particularly often for verbs in Ancient and Modern Greek. - adjective grammar Of or pertaining to a verb in the
aorist aspect .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a verb tense in some languages (classical Greek and Sanskrit) expressing action (especially past action) without indicating its completion or continuation
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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It's in what's called the aorist tense, which is a technical way of saying that Jesus 'anger is a temporary feeling.
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While the 3sg hi-ending appears to come from the 'aorist', I am puzzled why you say this form has a *ē in the root.
Looking for a simple origin to Hittite's hi-class preterite 2009
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IEists for example volley terms about like "aorist" (aspectual or tensal?) and "markedness" (phonetic or inflectional?) within a variety of sometimes contradictory contexts and it's important to recognize the shades of subtlety.
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IEists for example volley terms about like "aorist" (aspectual or tensal?) and "markedness" (phonetic or inflectional?) within a variety of sometimes contradictory contexts and it's important to recognize the shades of subtlety.
Archive 2007-05-01 2007
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In aspect, verbs can be simple ( "aorist") ( "Brutus stabbed Caesar"), progressive ( "Brutus was stabbing Caesar"), or perfect ( "Brutus has stabbed Caesar").
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" I should more aptly compare the non-continuous form *bʰḗr-m̥ 'I carry/carried' to the sigmatic "aorist" since they both end up being employed for past tense in later PIE dialects unlike the continuous presentive.
Looking for a simple origin to Hittite's hi-class preterite 2009
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" I should more aptly compare the non-continuous form *bʰḗr-m̥ 'I carry/carried' to the sigmatic "aorist" since they both end up being employed for past tense in later PIE dialects unlike the continuous presentive.
Archive 2009-08-01 2009
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It suggests a world in which my being able to rattle off the aorist participles of λυω entitles me to a seat next to Brad DeLong.
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Two: The traditional "present-aorist-perfect" verb model which is notorious for being an inadequate model representative only of a post-IE stage can be reworked into an earlier two-dimensional system of subjective/objective versus progressive/non-progressive to now explain why Anatolian & Tocharian verbs behave so differently.
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All this being said, we then understand why the perfective action could not possibly have been originally marked by *-i as proven by non-Anatolian dialects if its function were originally to express this aspect, due to the obvious semantic contradictions that would ensue, and we also see why the sigmatic aorist couldn't have ever applied to all verbs, such as punctives, likewise to avoid simple contradiction.
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This one word—modified to denote that the subject is third-person singular; the tense aorist, meaning it describes something that occurred and concluded at some point in the past; and the voice middle—has compressed within it the meaning that someone has hanged himself.
“The Middle Voice” Condé Nast 2023
chained_bear commented on the word aorist
"The young gentlemen had been introduced to the first aorist, the ablative absolute, and the elements of spherical trigonometry; these they pursued with little enthusiasm..."
--Patrick O'Brian, The Far Side of the World, 195–196
February 21, 2008
sionnach commented on the word aorist
yeah, but does he know his Finnish locative cases?
February 21, 2008
knitandpurl commented on the word aorist
"But W.'s studies of ancient Greek are not progressing well, he says. It's the aorist, it defeats him every time. W.'s bumping his head against the ceiling of his intelligence, he says. I often have that feeling, I tell him. —'No, you're just lazy', W. says."
Spurious by Lars Iyer, p 34
April 15, 2011