Imperfect Tense

Le temps imparfait

This lesson requires a Polly Passport subscription

Get complete access to all premium lessons, for all languages and courses, plus other advanced features, when you buy a Polly Passport subscription.

Buy a Polly Passport More Information

Introduction

Introduction

Also known as the past continuous, the imperfect verb tense is used to describe events taking place in the past without regards to when the event began or ended.

The imperfect tense describes actions that:
• were happening,
• used to happen,
• or happened regularly in the past and on going.

The simple past is more akin to the English past tense, in that it specifies an exact time the action took place. It however is used primarily in writing and formal occasions.

The most common way of expressiving past actions is the passé composé (compound past) tense, which is formed with the past participle and the verb avoir (to have).

The examples below illustrate the difference with the word parler:

Imperfect
Elle parlait.
She was talking.

Simple Past
Elle parla.
She talked.

Compound Past
Elle a parlé.
She has talked.

Vocabulary

Vocabulaire

Play parler
to speak to talk
Play aller
to go
Play partir
to go out to leave
Play vendre
to sell

This is only a preview of the lesson.

Get complete access with a Polly Passport.

Buy a Polly Passport More Information

Verb Conjugations

La conjugaison des verbes

Comments

Commentaires

Change language Flag es Spanish Flag en English Flag it Italian Flag de German Flag pt Portuguese