The Imperfect Tense in French (L’imparfait)
What Is the Imperfect Tense?
The imperfect tense in French (l’imparfait) is a past tense used to describe ongoing actions, habits, or states in the past. Unlike the passé composé, it does not indicate a completed action with a clear beginning and end. Think of it as a “background” tense — it sets the scene or describes what was happening.
In English, the imperfect often translates to “was doing,” “used to do,” or “would do (habitually).”
Quick Examples
- Je mangeais une pomme. → I was eating an apple.
- Elle habitait à Paris. → She used to live in Paris.
- Nous jouions au foot chaque samedi. → We used to play football every Saturday.
Simple Examples to Get Started
Here are a few everyday sentences in the imperfect tense to help you understand the feeling of this tense:
- Il faisait beau. → The weather was nice.
- Tu parlais trop vite. → You were speaking too fast.
- Les enfants dormaient. → The children were sleeping.
- Je regardais la télévision tous les soirs. → I used to watch television every evening.
- Vous aimiez le chocolat. → You used to like chocolate.
The Key Elements of the Imperfect Tense in French
To use the imperfect correctly, you need to understand three main components: the stem, the endings, and the uses.
1. How to Form the Imperfect Tense
The imperfect is formed from the nous form of the present tense. Remove the -ons ending to get the stem, then add the imperfect endings.
Step-by-step example with the verb parler (to speak):
- Present nous form: nous parlons
- Remove -ons: parl-
- Add imperfect endings: parlais, parlais, parlait, parlions, parliez, parlaient
The Imperfect Endings
| Subject Pronoun | Ending | Example (parler) | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| je | -ais | je parlais |
|