A finite verb is a verb that is inflected for person and for tense
according to the rules and categories of the languages in which it
occurs. Finite verbs can form independent clauses, which can stand by
their own as complete sentences.
Every grammatically correct
sentence or clause must contain a finite verb; sentence fragments not
containing finite verbs are described as phrases.
Some
interjections can play the same role. Even in English, a sentence like
Thanks for your help! has an interjection where it could have a subject
and a finite verb form (compare I appreciate your help!).
In English, as in most related languages, only verbs in certain moods are finite. These include:
*
the indicative mood (expressing a state of affairs); e.g., "The
bulldozer demolished the restaurant," "The leaves were yellow and
stiff."
* the imperative mood (giving a command).
* the
subjunctive mood (expressing something that might or might not be the
state of affairs, depending on some other part of the sentence); nearly
extinct in English.
A verb is a word that expresses an
occurrence, act, or mode of being. Finite verbs, sometimes called main
verbs, are limited by time (see tense), person, and number.
The finite verbs are highlighted in the following sentences:
The bear caught a salmon in the stream.
Who ate the pie?
Stop!
A nonfinite verb form - such as a participle, infinitive, or gerund - is not limited by by time (see tense), person, and number.
Verb forms that are not finite include:
* the infinitive
* participles (e.g., "The broken window...", "The wheezing gentleman...")
* gerunds and gerundives
In
linguistics, a non-finite verb (or a verbal) is a verb form that is not
limited by a subject; and more generally, it is not fully inflected by
categories that are marked inflectionally in language, such as tense,
aspect, mood, number, gender, and person. As a result, a non-finite verb
cannot generally serve as the main verb in an independent clause;
rather, it heads a non-finite clause.
By some accounts, a
non-finite verb acts simultaneously as a verb and as another part of
speech; it can take adverbs and certain kinds of verb arguments,
producing a verbal phrase (i.e., non-finite clause), and this phrase
then plays a different role — usually noun, adjective, or adverb — in a
greater clause. This is the reason for the term verbal; non-finite verbs
have traditionally been classified as verbal nouns, verbal adjectives,
or verbal adverbs.
English has three kinds of verbals:
participles, which function as adjectives; gerunds, which function as
nouns; and infinitives, which have noun-like, adjective-like, and
adverb-like functions. Each of these is also used in various common
constructs; for example, the past participle is used in forming the
perfect aspect (to have done).
Other kinds of verbals, such as supines and gerundives, exist in other languages.
Example:
The Crow and the Fox
One day a crow finds a tasty piece of cheese. She picks it up, flaps her wings, and flies to a high branch of a tree to eat it.
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