The nonpast tense (also spelled non-past) (abbreviated ) is a grammatical tense that distinguishes an action as taking place in times present or future. The nonpast tense contrasts with the past tense, which distinguishes an action as taking place prior to the moment of utterance.
The nonpast tense is observed in many languages. Due to a lack of future tense Inflection on the verb stem, many languages that are popularly conceived as having a three-way tense distinction (between past, Present tense, and Future tense), can in fact be understood as having a two-way past-nonpast tense distinction. For example, in English, future sentences often take present tense verb morphology, and do not contain specialized future tense verb morphology. In contrast, past tense sentences require specialized past tense morphology. Compares for instance the sentence: I hope he gets nonpast better tomorrow (in which the main verb gets is conjugated in the present tense, and the future is indicated lexically through the word tomorrow), and the sentence I hope he got past better yesterday (which requires the use of a specialized past tense form, got, for the main verb; use of gets is ungrammatical).
+Examples of languages containing the nonpast tense
!Language
!Sentence
!Translation |
English | I hope he gets better tomorrow |
German | Ich gehe morgen | I go- tomorrow |
Finnish | minä menen huomenna | I go- tomorrow |