<Tr> <Td> sh - m-r </Td> <Td> niʃˈmaʀ </Td> <Td> niʃˈmeʀet </Td> <Td> niʃmaˈʀim </Td> <Td> niʃmaˈʀot </Td> </Tr> <P> The present tense does not inflect by first, second, or third person because its use as a present tense is a relatively recent trend, as this form was originally used only as the participle . The modern present tense verb is still used as the present participle; see below . </P> <P> The ancient language did not have strictly defined past, present, or future tenses, but merely perfective and imperfective aspects, with past, present, or future connotation depending on context . Later the perfective and imperfective aspects were explicitly refashioned as the past and future tenses respectively, with the participle standing in as the present tense . (This also happened to the Aramaic language around the same time, but did not happen in Arabic, where the present and future tenses still share the same morphology, the one equivalent to the Hebrew future tense . The future tense is distinguished from the present tense by the use of prefixes .) </P> <P> A verb in the past tense (עָבָר ‬ ʕaˈvar) agrees with its subject in person (first, second, or third) and number, and in the second - person singular and plural and third - person singular, gender . </P>

Is there a future tense in hebrew language
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