In English grammar, aspect is the grammatical feature that shows how an action relates to time, specifically whether it is completed, ongoing, or repeated, often marked by auxiliary verbs like 'have' (perfective) and 'be' (progressive).
Aspect tells you about the internal shape of an action in time. It's not about when something happens (that's tense), but about how it unfolds: Is the action finished? Is it still going? Does it happen over and over? For example, "I ate" and "I was eating" both happened in the past, but the second one zooms in on the action while it was in progress.
English builds aspect inside the verb phrase using auxiliary (helping) verbs. The perfective aspect uses a form of have plus a past participle (have eaten, had finished) to present an action as completed. The progressive aspect uses a form of be plus the -ing form (is eating, was running) to show an action in progress. You can even stack them, as in have been eating, to combine both ideas.
Aspect shows up in two parts of this course: 1.3 Basic Grammatical Terminology, where you learn it as a core property of verbs, and 3.3 Verb Phrases and Phrasal Verbs, where you see how auxiliary verbs build it. Getting aspect right is how you control the timing and feel of your sentences. The difference between "I have studied for the test" (done, with present relevance) and "I was studying for the test" (ongoing in the past) changes what your reader pictures. When you analyze verb phrases, naming the aspect helps you explain why a sentence carries the meaning it does, which is the whole point of this subject.
Keep studying English Grammar and Usage Unit 1
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryTense (Unit 1, Unit 3)
Tense locates an action in time (past, present, future), while aspect describes its shape (finished or ongoing). English combines them, so "I had eaten" is past tense plus perfective aspect working together.
Perfective Aspect (Unit 3)
This is one of the two main aspects, formed with 'have' plus a past participle, and it frames an action as completed. "She has written the essay" uses perfective aspect to signal the action is done with relevance now.
Progressive Aspect (Unit 3)
Built with a form of 'be' plus the -ing form, progressive aspect shows action in progress. "He is running" focuses on the ongoing nature of the activity rather than its completion.
Main Verbs (Unit 3)
Aspect lives in the verb phrase, where auxiliary verbs attach to the main verb. The main verb carries the core meaning while 'have' or 'be' adds the aspect.
In grammar quizzes and exercises, you'll often be asked to identify the aspect of a verb phrase or to label tense and aspect together (for example, marking "had been waiting" as past perfect progressive). Sentence-analysis tasks may ask you to break a verb phrase into its main verb and auxiliaries and explain what each part contributes. In writing assignments, you show command of aspect by choosing the right form for the meaning you want, like using present perfect to connect a past action to now.
Tense answers when (past, present, future); aspect answers how the action unfolds (completed, ongoing, repeated). A single verb phrase can carry both: "was eating" is past tense (when) and progressive aspect (ongoing). Don't lump them together as one feature.
Aspect describes how an action relates to time in terms of completion, duration, or repetition, not when it happens.
The perfective aspect uses 'have' plus a past participle to mark an action as completed, as in 'have eaten.'
The progressive aspect uses a form of 'be' plus the -ing form to show an action in progress, as in 'is eating.'
Aspect and tense are separate features that combine in a verb phrase, so 'was studying' is both past tense and progressive aspect.
You can combine aspects, as in 'have been eating,' to show an action that is both completed up to now and ongoing.
Aspect is the grammatical feature that shows how an action relates to time, specifically whether it is completed (perfective), ongoing (progressive), or repeated. It's marked by auxiliary verbs like 'have' and 'be' inside the verb phrase.
No. Tense tells you when an action happens (past, present, future), while aspect tells you its shape (finished or ongoing). They work together, so "I had finished" is past tense plus perfective aspect.
Perfective and progressive. Perfective uses 'have' plus a past participle (have eaten) to show completion, and progressive uses 'be' plus the -ing form (is eating) to show an action in progress.
Look at the auxiliary verb and verb form: 'have' plus a past participle means perfective (has written), while a form of 'be' plus -ing means progressive (is writing). You can also stack them, as in 'has been writing.'
It changes what the reader pictures. "I have studied" suggests the studying is done and relevant now, while "I was studying" focuses on the action in progress in the past.