perfective done
noun
linguistics
: the verb form done (see done entry 1) used in various ways (as before a past tense verb form) in several varieties of English to communicate that something (such as an action) has ended: such as
a
: the verb form done used in African American English (as in "Everybody done gone" and "I done forgot his name!") to indicate that something (such as an action, a state, or an event) has ended or been completed and often to add emotional emphasis (as to convey a reaction of shock, surprise, or disappointment) : dən, preverbal done sense a, unstressed done
Their Black English vernacular dialect included some features such as … perfective done ("I done told you kids to go to bed").—Timothy C. Frazer
Baugh (1983) gives the following guidelines for the use of perfective done: "Done is perfective marker, and it is used with moderate regularity in colloquial contexts where suitable perfective comments are appropriate" (p.75).—Tempii B. Champion
Note: The feature of African American English called perfective done is unstressed in pronunciation, usually precedes past tense verb forms (such as talked, lived, or went) that express events or actions and that have a definite end point, sometimes precedes present tense verbs, and sometimes follows the invariant be and stressed BIN features.
b
: the verb form done used in some varieties of Southern American English to communicate the completion of something (such as an action) : preverbal done sense b
In the speech of white Southerners, perfective done has a wider distribution than it does in AAE [=African American English]. It can occur following the auxiliary be, which has not been reported in AAE (Green 2002). … It can also precede adjectives …—Katie Martin
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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