Grammar: Imperfect tense
The Imperfect verb tense (l’imparfait) in French is used to express continuous action in the past.
If we use the English verb “to give” as an example, the meanings of the French Imperfect version of this verb would be “I was giving,” “I used to give,” “I kept on giving,” or even “I gave.” There is some slight overlap with the Passé Composé tense in French, but we will discuss that in a future post.
How to form the Imperfect
- Start with the “nous” form of the verb. Eg for the verb “aller” (to go), start with “nous allons” (we go).
- Remove the “-ons” part from the verb itself. This leaves you with the imperfect stem (“all-“).
- Add the appropriate imperfect ending. For je, it is “-ais.” For tu, it is also “-ais.” For il/elle, it is “ait.” For nous, it is “ions.” For vous, it is “iez.” And for ils/elles, it is “aient.”
Person | Imperfect stem | Ending | Result | English |
je | all- | -ais | j’allais | I was going, used to go, kept on going, went |
tu | all- | -ais | tu allais | you were going, used to go, kept on going, went |
il/elle | all- | -ait | il allait | he was going, used to go, kept on going, went |
nous | all- | -ions | nous allions | we were going, used to go, kept on going, went |
vous | all- | -iez | vous alliez | you were going, used to go, kept on going, went |
ils | all- | -aient | ils allaient | they were going, used to go, kept on going, went |
Quick & dirty method
- Go to the “vous” form of the verb (eg “vous allez” – you go)
- Substitute “je,” “tu,” “il,” “elle,” “ça,” “on,” “ils” or “ils” for the word “vous”
- This leaves you with something that sounds like “je allez” which becomes “j’allais”
- There is a slight pronunciation difference, but it is not critical for beginners
- The only other things you need to know are that the “nous” form ends in “ions” and the “vous” form ends in “iez.” (“nous allions” – we were going, “vous alliez” – you were going).
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