Grammatical Categories of Verbs in German And Their Functional Characteristics
Аннотация
The article examines the grammatical categories of the German verb and their functional characteristics in contemporary usage. The German verb is approached as a central organizing element of the clause, combining lexical meaning with a set of grammatical oppositions that encode temporal reference, modality, voice, agreement, and the internal structure of events. Particular attention is paid to the functional distribution of the tense system (Präsens, Präteritum, Perfekt, Plusquamperfekt, Futur I/II), to mood as a grammatical interface between speaker stance and propositional content (Indikativ, Imperativ, Konjunktiv I/II), and to voice alternations (Vorgangspassiv, Zustandspassiv and related constructions) as mechanisms of perspectivization. The analysis demonstrates that grammatical categories in German are not merely paradigmatic forms but pragmatic instruments that structure information flow, encode evidential and evaluative meanings, and support genre-specific conventions. The findings highlight a functional hierarchy: while agreement categories anchor predication to participants, tense and mood contribute most strongly to discourse organization, and voice provides a resource for foregrounding, backgrounding, and institutional styles. The article concludes that the functional potential of German verb categories is best described through their interaction with clause structure, aspectual interpretations, and communicative settings rather than through isolated form inventories.
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