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The potential mood can be used only in present and perfect tenses.
We use the past participle to make the perfect tenses and all the passive forms.
In the incepted aspect it implies the English perfect tenses or the have form.
They are in the present, perfect, future, and future perfect tenses.
In the perfect tenses, the past participle often agreed with the gender and number of the direct object.
By contrast, ergative verbs take zijn (to be) in the perfect tenses.
Progressive and Perfect Tense 12.
In Dutch for example, unergatives take hebben (to have) in the perfect tenses:
Present, immediate future, present perfect, past and past perfect tenses are distinguished, the last being irregular in formation.
It is used with the auxiliary verb έχω (to have) to form the perfect, pluperfect and future perfect tenses.
Perfect tenses (have/has/had cleaned!
In Swedish language the supine is used with an auxiliary verb to produce some compound verb forms (perfect tenses).
In Dutch, ergative verbs are used in a way similar to English, but they stand out as more distinct particularly in the perfect tenses.
'Present Perfect Tense"'
The Past Perfect Tense (Intransitive)
However, embarazado can be used as a past participle in perfect tenses, as in: "Javier ha embarazado a María."
The song "Chastity" by pop-rock group The Raves (album Past Perfect Tense Hologramophone 1992) was inspired by the novel.
A CD titled Past Perfect Tense that took tracks from the Color of Tears LP and newly recorded material from 1989 was released in 1992.
The Green Dwarf, A Tale of the Perfect Tense was written in 1833 under the pseudonym Lord Charles Albert Florian Wellesley.
The tenses of the perfective aspect, which are the perfect, pluperfect and future perfect tenses, are used to express actions that have been, had been, or will have been completed.
A difference between Dutch and English is that typically the perfect tenses of infinitives take zijn (to be) as their auxiliary rather than hebben (to have), and this extends to these verbs as well.
In both Pashto and Hindi (Indo-Iranian), ergative behavior occurs only in the preterite and perfect tenses, and in the Georgian, ergativity only occurs in the perfective.
This association is quite strong in Dutch and speakers tend to treat verbs like forgetting and losing as ergatives in the perfect tenses even though they typically have a direct object and are really transitive verbs.
In the passive, the verb worden is used in the simple tenses and the verb zijn or wezen is used in the perfect tenses (only the conjugation using zijn is given).
The verbs derived from Latin habēre "to have", tenēre "to hold", and esse "to be" are used differently in the various Romance languages, to express possession, to construct perfect tenses, and to make existential statements ("there is").