Saying "will have" in Esperanto
kelle poolt PrimeMinisterK, 12. märts 2022
Postitused: 15
Keel: English
PrimeMinisterK (Näita profiili) 12. märts 2022 7:28.26
"In three years, I will have been living here for a decade."
or
"By tomorrow, I will have lost 20 pounds since I started exercising."
I'm getting tripped up on instances where you might say "will have" in English, referring to actions that started in the past but will be completed in the future. Would you just use the future tense for this?
Roberto12 (Näita profiili) 12. märts 2022 19:35.31
Post tri jaroj, mi estos loĝinta ĉi tie ekde jardeko (or "por jardeko").
Metsis (Näita profiili) 13. märts 2022 2:18.46
In "In three years, I will have been living here for a decade" the easy parts are "in three years", post tri jaroj, and "here", ĉi tie.
After those three years the action of living the state "comes to being", "emerges", estos, and at that point the action is still in progress, thus loĝanta. The form loĝinta would mean in my book that the living would have been ended.
To me the last piece, "for a decade" is a tricky one. My understanding is that it may not be translated to por jardeko because the general meaning of the preposition por is goal or purpose. As an extension of this por is used with time to denote a length of a future time which the action must last. For instance forvojaĝi por tri semajnoj, to travel away for three weeks. My reading is that here we do not have any must, rather a simple expression of a period. That is expressed by tempa akuzativo, so jardekon.
Putting all pieces together:
- Post tri jaroj mi estos loĝanta jardekon ĉi tie.
PrimeMinisterK (Näita profiili) 13. märts 2022 3:09.38
Roberto12:It's the future perfect, which is a periphrastic construction in this lang. The first example is:Thanks.
Post tri jaroj, mi estos loĝinta ĉi tie ekde jardeko (or "por jardeko").
PrimeMinisterK (Näita profiili) 13. märts 2022 3:21.49
Metsis:As Roberto said, this is one of the (few) cases where you must you a complex verb form. Here we describing a future state of an action that has been in progress for awhile.Thanks for the explanation. I probably need to understand participles better.
In "In three years, I will have been living here for a decade" the easy parts are "in three years", post tri jaroj, and "here", ĉi tie.
After those three years the action of living the state "comes to being", "emerges", estos, and at that point the action is still in progress, thus loĝanta. The form loĝinta would mean in my book that the living would have been ended.
To me the last piece, "for a decade" is a tricky one. My understanding is that it may not be translated to por jardeko because the general meaning of the preposition por is goal or purpose. As an extension of this por is used with time to denote a length of a future time which the action must last. For instance forvojaĝi por tri semajnoj, to travel away for three weeks. My reading is that here we do not have any must, rather a simple expression of a period. That is expressed by tempa akuzativo, so jardekon.
Putting all pieces together:
PS. I think that many would opt for a simpler structure at least when speaking: Post tri jaroj pasos jardeko ekde tiam, kiam mi ekloĝis ĉi tie.
- Post tri jaroj mi estos loĝanta jardekon ĉi tie.
What if you were saying something like, "By tomorrow, I will have finished writing my letter." How would you translate that?
It's odd to me that a phrase like "for a decade" would be tricky. That seems like such a simple and common type of expression that I would think Zemenhof and Co. would've quickly developed a way to say this sort of thing.
Metsis (Näita profiili) 14. märts 2022 9:10.01
In the future (estos) the action (skribi) is in a state of being ended. So
- Morgaŭ mi estos skribinta mian leteron.
- Morgaŭ mi estos kompletiginta mian leteron.
- Morgaŭ mi kompletigos mian leteron.
Metsis (Näita profiili) 14. märts 2022 10:42.44
We have antaŭ and post to express that something happened, happens or will happen before resp. after a certain time reference. There is no connotation to length in antaŭ and post, so they are points in time. Then we have ĝis and de which work in the similar way except they have length.
antaŭ with past, present and future event
- Ni manĝis, antaŭ ol ri alvenis
- Antaŭ kelkaj jaroj mi vizitis Seulon
- Antaŭ la sekva semajno mi ne povas partopreni
- Post kelkaj jaroj da malliberiĝo oni amnestiis rin
- Kiel ne venis al vi en la kapon diri, ke post monato oni povas sciiĝi ankoraŭ pli bone
- Mi forveturos post monato de hodiaŭ
- Mi konsideris ĉiujn proponojn, kiujn estis senditaj al mi ĝis tiu dato
- La rezultoj, kiuj sin montris ĝis hodiaŭ, plifortigas mian kredon
- Mi konsilas atendi, ĝis la komitato donos sian decidon
- Jam de monato ili ne ricevis sian salajro
- Kia bedaŭro ĝi estos por tiuj, kiuj atendadas de monatoj por ekvidi la spektaĵon
- Komencante de morgaŭ…
In "In three years, I will have been living here for a decade" we have post + future event. Now this future event has its own time description. It is neither a duration (dum), a single event (en) nor a subject (la pasinta jardeko estis…), but something (yet more) different. For me tempa akuzativo is piece of cake since my native language has it, but I can well imagine that it is not for all.
PrimeMinisterK (Näita profiili) 16. märts 2022 2:19.32
Metsis:"By tomorrow, I will have finished writing my letter."Thanks for the explanation.
In the future (estos) the action (skribi) is in a state of being ended. So
But since the idea is to emphasise finishing of the writing, a better verb might be kompletigi, which gives us
- Morgaŭ mi estos skribinta mian leteron.
which can be simplified to
- Morgaŭ mi estos kompletiginta mian leteron.
I have noticed that in many cases you need to think how long an action lasts. While writing is a long lasting action, finishing is a short one and that can be expressed with a simple verb.
- Morgaŭ mi kompletigos mian leteron.
I'm going to have to think about this and try to get my head around it, because the phrasing here does not naturally seem to mean what it apparently means. For instance, if I see "Morgaŭ mi estos skribinta mian leteron," I naturally read it as, "Tomorrow I will be written my letter," which just comes off as the kind of gibberish someone might say if English is their second language.
My knowledge and understanding of participles is woefully deficient. I should probably take a week to really study that subject and try to get it down.
PrimeMinisterK (Näita profiili) 16. märts 2022 2:37.14
Metsis:Maybe it is just me but I find sometimes time expressions in Esperanto ,well, odd might be a too short word but shall we say, requiring thinking.Thanks again for the detailed explanation.
Some of this also is challenging for me because of how unnatural it sounds in my head. For instance, "antaŭ kelkaj jaroj" . . . "before some years," when translated literally. I think that, like I was saying with participles in my last response, learning these time expressions is something that might require its own dedicated specialized study.
I'm going to look over everything you posted in more detail as I have time to see what sense I can make it of it.
sudanglo (Näita profiili) 17. märts 2022 11:40.28
Really, Metsis? I haven't checked , but is there any support from the Tekstaro for your preference for 'loĝanta'.
In my book estos loĝinta doesn't imply the intention to move out.
If you want to avoid the complex form you could say Post 3 jaro mi loĝos ĉi tie jam dek jarojn. But I find 'estos loĝinta ĉi tie jam dek jarojn' more elegant.