Aristotle On Interpretation Chapter 3 Table of Contents Catalogue of Titles Logos Virtual Library Catalogue |
On Interpretation Translated by E. M. Edghill Chapter 3 A verb is that which, in addition to its proper meaning, carries with it the notion of time. No part of it has any independent meaning, and it is a sign of something said of something else. I will explain what I mean by saying that it carries with it the notion of time. Health is a noun, but is healthy is a verb; for besides its proper meaning it indicates the present existence of the state in question. Moreover, a verb is always a sign of something said of something else, i.e. of something either predicable of or present in some other thing. Such expressions as is not-healthy, is not-ill, I do not describe as verbs; for though they carry the additional note of time, and always form a predicate, there is no specified name for this variety; but let them be called indefinite verbs, since they apply equally well to that which exists and to that which does not. Similarly he was healthy, he will be healthy, are not verbs, but tenses of a verb; the difference lies in the fact that the verb indicates present time, while the tenses of the verb indicate those times which lie outside the present. Verbs in and by themselves are substantival and have significance, for he who uses such expressions arrests the hearers mind, and fixes his attention; but they do not, as they stand, express any judgement, either positive or negative. For neither are to be and not to be nor the participle being significant of any fact, unless something is added; for they do not themselves indicate anything, but imply a copulation, of which we cannot form a conception apart from the things coupled.
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