The cessative aspect or terminative aspect is a grammatical aspect referring to the end of an action or a state.[1] It is the opposite of the inchoative aspect and conveys the idea "to finish doing something".
In Yaqui, the cessative is formed with the suffix -yaáte. For example:
ču'ú
dog
'íntok
and
čái-yaáte-k
yell-stop-PFV
'á'a
him
nók-híkkaha-ki-i
talk-hear-PPL-STAT
"the dog stopped barking when he heard him talking"
To change any of the following default expansions, see the template's documentation:
assuming STAT means "stative";
assuming PFV means "perfective aspect";
In Timbisha, the cessative is formed with the suffix -mmahwan. For example: