The uses of imperfect aspect are as
follows.
1.
vav plus imperfect in VS
order is “narrative past”, used within an episode to track the progress of the
plot.
2.
vav plus subject plus
imperfect is a relative or coordinate clause.
3.
without vav in SV order is
possibly a true future tense usage.
4.
without vav may also be an
imperfect of process; this first turns up in Leviticus and may be a clue to the
relationship between imperfect and progressive aspects.
5.
vav plus imperfect in the
2nd singular or plural define the generalized or definitional envelope of
commandments or refer to a known cultural feature.
6.
in the 3rd person, in
portions about sacrificial ritual, imperfect provides the framework for the
ritual actions like the generalization envelope for a k’lal u-prat [u-k’lal]
structure.
7.
Preceded by ki or im is the
“if” clause in a law, usually a tort. Again, this is an envelope to a klal
uprat [uklal] structure.
8.
part of a parallel
structure in poetry and prophecy following a perfect verb as a parallel. They
will not use the same verb root and sometimes not the same binyan.
Number 7 is possibly the most
important use of imperfect aspect in the legal section. Here is Exodus 22:4. See how the imperfect aspect with ki is followed by perfect aspect verbs.
If a case does not match the definition in imperfect, there’s no case to try.
If the individual elements that are expressed in perfect aspect don’t apply,
the defendant cannot be convicted.
ד כִּ֤י יַבְעֶר־אִישׁ֙ שָׂדֶ֣ה אוֹ־כֶ֔רֶם וְשִׁלַּח֙
אֶת־בְּעִירֹ֔ה וּבִעֵ֖ר בִּשְׂדֵ֣ה אַחֵ֑ר מֵיטַ֥ב שָׂדֵ֛הוּ וּמֵיטַ֥ב כַּרְמ֖וֹ
יְשַׁלֵּֽם:
If a man lights a fire in
a field or vineyard, and the fire gets out and burns in another [person’s]
field: From the best of his field or the best of his vineyard he pays.
People used to burn off weeds; that’s
the ki yaver. The v’shilach and u-vier in the middle are perfect aspect. The final yishalem is another imperfect aspect.
So the definition of the tort is a
field on fire; what the court can try is whether that fire got out and burned
up somebody else’s property; if the firestarter is convicted, the definition of
the damages he pays is funded by his best land.
The first imperfect aspect verb is a
generalization, something that people ordinarily do for neutral reasons. The
perfect aspect verbs are specifications of possible consequences and I will
come back to them in another post about binyan use. The final imperfect aspect
is another generalization: the firestarter has to pay damages if he is
convicted. Notice that this is the only sanction of what happened; nobody is
allowed to come burn his field in revenge. That’s the lesson of the imperfect klal
at the end.
This is a structure formally identfied
about 100 CE, attributed to Rabbi Yishmael and documented in the introduction
to Midrash Halakhah Sifre (on Leviticus). It’s called klal u-prat u-klal and what it means is if anything else happens
except the fire burning somebody else’s field or harvested produce, there’s no
court case. That includes limiting the sanctions to paying a fine.
The klal u-prat [u-klal] is a
fundamental structure of Torah, even in the narratives, except that narratives
may reverse things and have the first or last verses in perfect aspect. The
narrative verbs will tend to be in something called “narrative past”, which is
an imperfect verb with a vav prefix. All narratives are past to the
narrator, but to the characters in them, they are incomplete until the
denouement of the narrative is reached. Neat, huh?
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