Verbs: Dynamic

Stative

Describes a state that is constant over time. These usually do not take the continuous (-ing) form: love, know, believe

I know the answer (you don’t usually say knowing the…)

Select the appropriate dynamic effect

Activity Focus: The Labor (ongoing)

Accomplishment Focus: The Achievement of the Labor (process + goal)

Achievement Focus: The Result (instant moment of change)

Semelfactive Focus: The Pulse (brief, non-changing act)
  • If you want to criticize for being “all talk and no action,” you would describe the work as Activities:

They spent years protesting and shouting in the streets. (activity—no end point, no result).

Activities = The labor of being (e.g., “fighting for justice”).

  • Praise for being effective, you switch to Accomplishments:

They passed three laws and secured funding for the community.” (accomplishments—they hit the “stopping point” of success).

Accomplishments = The labor of achieving (e.g., “winning the court case”). The focus is both on the outcome and the path.

  • Show it’s capable of creating a “before and after” moment. To make it look decisive and powerful, use * Achievements*

After months of stagnation, the coalition collapsed the opposition’s defense and won the vote.

They found the solution

Achievement = “one-way door.” It is an instantaneous change of state, focus on the outcome. Happen in a flash. By using these, skip the “boring” part of the work and focus entirely on the victory.

  • To portray actions as superficial, brief, and repetitive without ever leading to a result. It makes them look weak or performative, use Semelfactives

The ministers merely glanced at the petition and shrugged at the protesters’ demands (glance and shrug are Semelfactives, “point events” that don’t change anything)

Going through the motions.” It feels like a “beat” that doesn’t lead to a “song.”

Dynamic impact

Aspect

Activity (Atelic)

Accomplishment (Telic)

Achievement (Telic)

Semelfactive (Atelic)

Energy

Diffusion (Spreading out)

Concentration (Building up)

Instantaneous release

Single burst

Result

None (The doing is the point)

A Product (The result is the point)

A change of state

None (no lasting result)

Example

“The scholars debated.”

“The scholars wrote a manifesto.”

“She recognized the pattern.”

“He tapped the table.”

Rhetorical Effect

Emphasizes a way of life or a culture.

Emphasizes results and tangible output.

Emphasizes decisive moments or breakthroughs

Emphasizes brief, momentary actions

Dynamic and stopping point

For dynamic verbs, the stopping point is the key characteristic of dynamic activities.

Dynamic verbs by stopping point and duration:

Category

Has a Stopping Point?

Has Duration? (Takes time)

Example

Activity

No

Yes

They are talking.

Accomplishment

Yes

Yes

They are writing a book.

Achievement

Yes

No

They reached the top.

Semelfactive

No

No (instantaneous)

He knocked on the door.

Activities

No inherent end point. If you stop the action at any moment, you have still technically “done” the action

She walked in the park for an hour. (if she stopped at 30 minutes, she still “walked.”)

We stared at the ocean in silence.

Achievements

Instantaneous transitions. A “flash” event that creates a new state (explode, lose, arrive, notice, snap.).

They recognized the problem.

Test: Happened in a split of a second?

He is winning (achievment)

Doesn’t mean he is performing the act of winning; it means he is performing an activity that makes the achievement likely - also considered achievment

Accomplishments

Process with a logical end point. These are finished only when the specific “item” or “distance” is completed. (building a house, writing an essay)

Walking to the grocery store (finished when you arrive).

Reading a specific news article (finished when you hit the last sentence).

Eating an apple (finished when only the core remains)

She walked to the grocery store in ten minutes (the event isn’t “done” until she reaches the door.)

He read the entire newspaper over breakfast (the event ends when the last page is turned.)

Any done state is an accomplishment

She read the book

Semelfactives

A single “point” event that doesn’t change anything (semel is “once” in latin). Verbs that represent a single, punctual event that has no internal duration and—crucially—does not result in a lasting change of state.

He knocked on the door (single event, the door is the same)

He was knocking on the door. (A series of semelfactive acts turned into a durative activity).

Using for/in

Category

Works with “For X time”?

Works with “In X time”?

Internal Logic

Activity

YES

NO

It just continues.

Accomplishment

(YES)*

YES

It builds to a finish.

Achievement

NO

YES

It happens at a point.

Semelfactive

(Only if repeated)

NO

It is a single pulse.

*Note: Using “For” with an Accomplishment usually cancels the “Telic” nature, turning it into a simple Activity:

I read the book for an hour (doesn’t mean I finished it)

Impact

  • When you use “For,” the subject is often a victim of time or a participant in a cycle.

  • When you use “In,” the subject is a master of time who forces a conclusion.

The “For” trap: Activity

Framing inefficiency

  • The “For” test is the primary tool for exposing bureaucratic drift, or empty virtue signaling. It frames the action as a state of being rather than a step toward a goal.

The administration consulted with experts for eighteen months

The rhetorical weight: The “For” suggests that the consulting is an end in itself. It feels like a “lifestyle” of the administration rather, than a path to a solution.

  • If you want to make them look like they are spinning their wheels, keep the “For.”

The “In” momentum: Accomplishment

Framing competence

  • To praise a movement or a leader, you frame their work as a process that has a finish line. The “In” test proves that their labor is finite and productive.

The movement unionized the entire factory in a single weekend.

The Rhetorical Weight: The “In” creates a sense of high-velocity success. It tells the reader that there was a plan, a process, and a definitive completion.

Use this to show that a group doesn’t just “protest” (Activity); they “achieve” (Accomplishment).

Done state and process

Sometimes it’s tricky to identify an accomplishment or achievement. If a “done state” is provided, it’s the stopping point.

He is drinking a liter of water (accomplishment, a liter is a quantity done state)

She is writing a book (accomplishment, the book is the done state)

However, all the following are achievements. This is a snap stopping point, you can’t stop in the middle.

Finding your lost keys.

Noticing a stain on your shirt.

Winning a board game.

Buying a coffee (The moment the transaction clears).

So:

Marching to the capital (accomplishment)

Arriving to the capital (achievement)

With achievements: The instant they appeared, the situation changed. The journey is irrelevant; only the “click” of their presence matters.

The “In” Strike (Achievement):

Framing power

Since Achievements are instantaneous, the “In” test is used to show a radical shift. It’s not about the work; it’s about the ”snap” of the status quo breaking.

The scandal toppled the prime minister in forty-eight hours

The Rhetorical Weight: Here, “In” highlights the suddenness. It makes the event feel like an inevitable collapse.

Use this for “political earthquakes”

Achievement vs Accomplishment

Syntactically, Achievements and Accomplishments often look identical because they both license the “in” prepositional phrase.

They share the same natural stopping point: However, the “structural” difference between them reveals itself when you try to use them with certain ”process” verbs or progressive tenses.

The “Progressive” Test (The -ing Test)

  • Accomplishments have internal duration, the progressive form means the process is happening.

  • Achievements are instantaneous, the progressive form often changes the meaning to “about to happen.”

She is writing a book (accomplishment)

Meaning: He is in the middle of the process.

Progressive with achievement

He is winning the race (achievement, win happens in a single point)

Meaning: He hasn’t won yet; he is approaching the finish line.

Rhetorical Tip: Use the progressive with an Achievement to create suspense (the moment just before the snap). Use it with an Accomplishment to show industry (the work being done).

The “Stop/Finish” Test

Because an Accomplishment has a process, you can “stop” or “finish” it. Because an Achievement is a single point, “finishing” it sounds redundant or strange.

He finished building the house.” (Natural, accomplishment)

He finished reaching the summit (Unnatural—you don’t “finish” a moment; you just hit it).

The “ambiguity” of the “In” phrase

While both take “in,” the “in” phrase actually measures two different things:

Accomplishment + "In": Measures the duration of the labor.

He wrote the bill in three days.” (The writing took 72 hours).

Achievement + "In": Measures the gap of time before the event.

The government fell in three days. (It didn’t take 72 hours to “fall”—it took 72 hours for the collapse to happen).

Syntactic Summary

  • Test Accomplishment Achievement “In” Phrase Measures length of work.

  • Measures time until the click. Progressive (-ing)

In the middle of doing

On the verge of happening.

This is why “…winning” is an achievement

  • To sound analytical, use Accomplishments with “in” to show how long a victory took to build.

  • If you want to sound dramatic, use Achievements with “in” to show how quickly the status quo can vanish.

  • If you find yourself using “for” too often, your writing may feel like it’s “drifting” (Activities).

  • If you want to show momentum and results, try to rephrase sentences so they can pass the “in” test (Accomplishments/Achievements).

Dynamic summary

Class

Example

Focus

Activity

He searched for the truth.

Labor

Accomplishment

He wrote the manifesto.

Labor + process, completed work, any done state, even without timing

Achievement

He discovered the truth.

Results, moment of insight

Semelfactive

He glanced at the clock.

A brief, isolated act, non-changing

  • With accomplishments, the duration, the effort, the process, and the physical toll of the journey matters. Process verbs & progressives with done state.

  • With achievements the done state is a snap, or the verb does not allow process, journey, progress.

For: The for “trap”. “Lifestyle”, administration, spinning the wheels rather than a path to a solution.

In accomplishment:: The “in momentum”. A plan, a process, a definitive completion. A done state. Use progressive tense, process verbs.

He is writing the book

In strike: Instantaneous, radical shift, snap, inevitable change

Important: The verb itself does not inherently belongs to a specific dynamic category. A verb on its own can not encode the situation.

No strict “one verb = one situation type” system. The situation type emerges from:

  • Verb meaning

  • Complements (objects, PPs)

  • Aspect (progressive/perfect)

  • Adverbials (for an hour / in an hour)

Here is the same verb, “run”, used for all the dynamic categories:

Type

Example with run

Activity

She was running in the park.

Accomplishment

She ran five kilometres in 25 minutes.

Achievement

She ran into John at the station. (≈ sudden meeting; punctual “event”)

Semelfactive

She ran a step and stopped. / She gave a single run of footsteps. (forced single, bounded occurrence)