Prospective aspect
In linguistics, the prospective aspect is a grammatical aspect describing an event that occurs subsequent to a given reference time. One way to view tenses in English and many other languages is as a combination of a reference time in which a situation takes place, and the time of a particular event relative to the reference time. As an example, consider the following sentence:
- When I got home yesterday, John called and said he would arrive soon.
In English, the prospective aspect is most clearly distinguished in the past. The English future tense expressed by the auxiliary verb will refers to an event in the absolute future, regardless of the reference time or relative time of the event:
- Whenever I get home, John usually calls and says he will arrive soon.
- When I get home tomorrow, John will arrive and meet me.
- When I get home tomorrow, John will probably call and say he will arrive soon.
- When I got home yesterday, John called and said he will arrive in three weeks.
However, in English it is possible to express the prospective aspect in tenses other than the past using the so-called going-to future: "He says he's going to finish soon. But yesterday he was also going to finish soon, and I'm sure in five weeks he'll still be going to finish soon."
The opposite of the prospective aspect is the retrospective aspect, more commonly known as the "perfect":
- When I got home yesterday, John had already arrived.
- Don't wait a week; John will have already left.
- I told him not to wait a week; John would have already left.
- I was going to have left by then, but got distracted.