L'Imparfait
L'Imparfait
written by: Tommy Carlton edited by: Tricia Goss updated: 12/13/2011 One of the main past tenses used in French, l'imparfait is very useful for describing past events and circumstances. Learn how to conjugate it, including all regular patterns and several irregular ones as well.
Regular Conjugations
Forming the imparfait consists of two parts, the verb stem (called la racine), and the verb ending (called la terminaison). As I'm sure most French students are happy to learn, the imparfait is quite possibly the easiest tense in the French language to learn. To find the stem of the verb, you must first conjugate the verb in the present tense, and take the nous form. Parler (to speak), for example, conjugates as nous parlons. At this point, you drop the -ons at the end, and you have your stem. It does not matter how irregular the verb is in the present tense, all you need is the nous form, minus the -ons at the end. Avoir (to have) conjugates in the present as nous avons, drop the -ons, you have av- as your stem. At this point, you need the endings. The endings are the same for all verbs in the imparfait, and they are as follows:
3/4 BHK Apartments
www.klassic.in
Starts @3875/Sq.ft with No EMI For 24 Months. Get Yours Today!
www.konicaminolta.in
Be it printing,copying,scanning Colour up your business.Buy now
MyCity4Kids.com
Compare & Choose the most suitable options around your home for kids.
Ads by Google je --> -ais tu --> -ais il/elle/on --> -ait nous --> ions vous --> iez ils/elles --> aient So to form the imparfait, you simply combine the stem of the verb with the appropriate ending. Take our earlier example, parler. It conjugates in the present as nous parlons. Drop the -ons, we have parl-, and then add the endings, and you get the following: je parlais tu parlais il/elle/on parlait nous parlions vous parliez ils/elles parlaient As you can see, there are only two steps to this tense, making up the following simple rule: verb stem [nous form in present tense, minus -ons] + ending [-ais, -ais, -ait, -ions, -iez, -aient] = imparfait
Irregular Conjugations
Earlier, I told you that the imparfait just might be the easiest verb in the French language, and I was telling the truth. One of the hardest parts of most conjugations is learning the many irregular forms and stems. With the imparfait, however, the endings are the same for every verb, and the stem is formed with the same pattern, as discussed in the previous section. However, in conjugating some of the verbs you have worked with before, you might run across the following situation:
tre (to be) nous sommes Ok, we have the nous form, so we drop the -ons...except, there is not an -ons to drop! In fact, tre is the only verb in the French language whose present tense nous form does not end in -ons. It is, therefore, the only irregular imparfait conjugation in the French language. Because we cannot find a stem with our normal methods, we use the stem t- instead. tre conjugates in the imparfait as follows: j'tais tu tais il/elle/on tait nous tions vous tiez ils/elles taient The endings are the same as all the regular verbs, the stem is the only change. Just remember the t- stem, and you will be fine. I always found it useful to remember the common phrase "Quand j'tais jeune..." which begins many stories.