Imparfait for Descriptions and Habits
The Imparfait paints the background scenery and repeated habits of your past life with simple, rhythmic endings.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use Imparfait for past descriptions like weather, age, feelings, and physical traits.
- Use it for past habits or repeated actions (things you 'used to' do).
- Form it: take 'nous' stem from present tense and add specific past endings.
- Think of it as the 'scenery' or 'background music' of your past story.
Quick Reference
| Subject | Endings | Example (Parler) | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| je | -ais | je parlais | I was speaking / used to speak |
| tu | -ais | tu parlais | you were speaking |
| il / elle / on | -ait | il parlait | he was speaking |
| nous | -ions | nous parlions | we were speaking |
| vous | -iez | vous parliez | you (pl) were speaking |
| ils / elles | -aient | ils parlaient | they were speaking |
أمثلة رئيسية
3 من 9Quand j'étais petit, je jouais au foot chaque samedi.
When I was little, I used to play football every Saturday.
La maison était grande et avait des volets bleus.
The house was big and had blue shutters.
Nous mangions souvent des crêpes le dimanche.
We often ate crepes on Sundays.
The 'Nous' Shortcut
Always keep the 'nous' form of the present tense in your head. If you know 'nous buvons', you instantly have the stem 'buv-' for 'I was drinking' (je buvais).
The Silent 'Aient'
The 'ils/elles' ending '-aient' is totally silent. It sounds exactly like 'ais'. Don't let those extra letters trick you into making a new sound!
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use Imparfait for past descriptions like weather, age, feelings, and physical traits.
- Use it for past habits or repeated actions (things you 'used to' do).
- Form it: take 'nous' stem from present tense and add specific past endings.
- Think of it as the 'scenery' or 'background music' of your past story.
Overview
Think of the imparfait as the cinematic backdrop of your life. While the passé composé handles the quick action shots, the imparfait handles the scenery. It sets the mood. It describes the atmosphere. It tells us what things were like back then. If you are talking about childhood memories, you need this. If you are describing a beautiful sunset in Paris, you need this. It is one of the most expressive tenses in French. It moves away from specific events. Instead, it focuses on states of being and continuous flow. Think of it like a long-exposure photograph. Everything is a bit soft and ongoing. It is friendly and nostalgic. You will use it to paint pictures with your words.
How This Grammar Works
This tense focuses on the past without a clear beginning or end. Imagine you are watching an old movie. The imparfait is the background music playing. It is also the steady rain in the scene. In English, we often translate this as "used to" or "was doing." For example, "I was eating" or "I used to live here." It does not care about the exact second something stopped. It cares about the habit. It cares about the feeling. In French, we use it for descriptions and repeated actions. It is very regular. This makes it a favorite for many students. You only have one truly irregular verb to worry about! That is basically a grammar miracle.
Formation Pattern
- 1Building the
imparfaitis like following a simple recipe. You only need two main ingredients: the right stem and the special endings. - 2Find the present tense
nousform of the verb. - 3Remove the
-onsending. This is your magic stem. - 4Add the
imparfaitendings to that stem. - 5Here are the endings you must memorize:
- 6
je->-ais - 7
tu->-ais - 8
il/elle/on->-ait - 9
nous->-ions - 10
vous->-iez - 11
ils/elles->-aient - 12Let’s look at
parler. Thenousform isparlons. Remove-onsto getparl-. Now add the endings:je parlais,tu parlais,il parlait. It sounds exactly like a melody! Note that-ais,-ais,-ait, and-aientall sound the same. This is your new best friend in pronunciation. The only rebel isêtre. Its stem isét-. Everything else follows thenousrule. Even the weird verbs likefinir(finissons->finiss-) follow this. It is very logical.
When To Use It
Use the imparfait when you want to describe a scene. This includes weather, age, feelings, and physical traits. "The sky was blue" is le ciel était bleu. Use it for habits. "Every Sunday, we went to the park" is chaque dimanche, nous allions au parc. Think of it for ongoing actions. "I was sleeping when the phone rang." The sleeping part is imparfait. It is the background state. It is perfect for telling stories. It gives the listener the context. You use it to say how old you were. J'avais dix ans. You use it for emotions. J'étais heureux. It is the "vibe" tense. Use it when there is no specific deadline for the action. If it happened many times, it belongs here. If it was a continuous state, it belongs here.
When Not To Use It
Do not use the imparfait for sudden, one-time actions. If you tripped and fell once, use passé composé. If the action has a clear start and a clear finish, stay away from imparfait. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. Green means the action is flowing (imparfait). Red means the action stopped dead (passé composé). If you say "I lived in Paris for two years," and you are done, use passé composé. If you say "I was living in Paris when I met her," use imparfait. Avoid it for lists of events. "I woke up, I ate, I left." These are all completed snapshots. They are not background scenery.
Common Mistakes
Many people forget to go to the nous form first. They try to use the infinitive stem. This will fail with verbs like finir or vendre. Always check the nous form! Another mistake is the "ils" ending. People often try to pronounce the -ent in -aient. Keep it silent! It sounds just like -ais. Don't overthink the nous and vous forms. They add an i (-ions, -iez). It feels a bit like the subjonctif or the present tense of étudier. It sounds like "ee-ons." Another trap is using it for a specific duration. If you mention "for three hours," you usually need the passé composé. The imparfait is for vague timeframes.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
In English, we have "I was eating" and "I used to eat." French uses the imparfait for both. This simplifies things for you! However, the biggest fight is with the passé composé. Think of the passé composé as the interrupter. You were walking (imparfait) when you saw a dog (passé composé). The walking was the movie scene. The dog was the plot point. In a job interview, you use imparfait to describe your old responsibilities. You use passé composé to talk about a specific project you finished. It’s the difference between "I was a manager" and "I signed the contract."
Quick FAQ
Q. Is être the only irregular verb?
A. Yes! Every other verb uses the nous stem rule.
Q. Can I use it for the future?
A. No, it is strictly for the past scenery and habits.
Q. How do I say "I used to" in French?
A. Just use the imparfait. No extra words are needed.
Q. Does it matter if I use imparfait or passé composé for weather?
A. Usually, weather is imparfait because it sets the scene.
Q. What about verbs ending in -ger like manger?
A. Keep the e before -ais to keep the soft "g" sound! Je mangeais.
Reference Table
| Subject | Endings | Example (Parler) | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| je | -ais | je parlais | I was speaking / used to speak |
| tu | -ais | tu parlais | you were speaking |
| il / elle / on | -ait | il parlait | he was speaking |
| nous | -ions | nous parlions | we were speaking |
| vous | -iez | vous parliez | you (pl) were speaking |
| ils / elles | -aient | ils parlaient | they were speaking |
The 'Nous' Shortcut
Always keep the 'nous' form of the present tense in your head. If you know 'nous buvons', you instantly have the stem 'buv-' for 'I was drinking' (je buvais).
The Silent 'Aient'
The 'ils/elles' ending '-aient' is totally silent. It sounds exactly like 'ais'. Don't let those extra letters trick you into making a new sound!
The Mental Camera
Think of the Imparfait as the 'long exposure' shot. If the action feels like it has blurry edges and is ongoing, use Imparfait.
Nostalgic Storytelling
French speakers love using this tense to reminisce. Starting a sentence with 'C'était le bon vieux temps...' (It was the good old days...) will make you sound very natural.
أمثلة
9Quand j'étais petit, je jouais au foot chaque samedi.
Focus: jouais
When I was little, I used to play football every Saturday.
A repeated action in the past requires the imparfait.
La maison était grande et avait des volets bleus.
Focus: était
The house was big and had blue shutters.
Describing physical traits of an object.
Nous mangions souvent des crêpes le dimanche.
Focus: mangions
We often ate crepes on Sundays.
For 'nous', we don't need the extra 'e' after 'g' because 'i' already softens it.
Je commençais mon travail à huit heures.
Focus: commençais
I used to start my work at eight o'clock.
Use the cedilla (ç) before 'a' to keep the soft 's' sound.
À l'époque, le directeur souhaitait nous rencontrer régulièrement.
Focus: souhaitait
At the time, the director wished to meet us regularly.
Formal description of a past professional state.
✗ Je finirais mes devoirs hier. → ✓ Je finissais mes devoirs quand il est arrivé.
Focus: finissais
I was finishing my homework when he arrived.
Use the 'nous' stem (finiss-) for IR verbs, not the infinitive.
✗ J'ai été triste toute la semaine. → ✓ J'étais triste toute la semaine.
Focus: étais
I was sad all week.
Emotions in the past are usually descriptions of a state.
Si j'avais de l'argent, j'achèterais une voiture.
Focus: avais
If I had money, I would buy a car.
Imparfait is used after 'si' in hypothetical sentences.
Il venait de partir quand le téléphone a sonné.
Focus: venait
He had just left when the phone rang.
Using 'venir' in imparfait for recent past context.
اختبر نفسك
Choose the correct form of 'être' to describe the past weather.
Hier, il ___ très beau et chaud.
Weather is a description of a past state, so we use the imparfait.
Fill in the repeated past action for 'nous'.
Quand nous habitions à Lyon, nous ___ au restaurant souvent.
Habits in the past require the 'nous' form of the imparfait.
Select the correct stem for the verb 'finir'.
Tu ___ toujours tes repas rapidement.
The stem comes from 'nous finissons', which is 'finiss-'.
🎉 النتيجة: /3
وسائل تعلم بصرية
Imparfait vs Passé Composé
Building the Verb
Is the verb 'être'?
Use 'ét-' as stem?
Add endings (-ais, -ais, -ait...)?
Common Time Markers for Imparfait
Frequency
- • Tous les jours
- • Chaque matin
- • Souvent
Era
- • Quand j'étais jeune
- • À l'époque
- • Autrefois
الأسئلة الشائعة
20 أسئلةIt is primarily used for descriptions and habits in the past. Use it to set the scene or describe a routine like je courais tous les jours.
It is the only irregular verb. Use the stem ét- and add regular endings, like j'étais and nous étions.
Yes, they add an 'i' sound before the ending. Nous parlions sounds like 'parl-ee-on'.
Because it captures irregular stems like finiss- or buv- that other forms might miss. It is the most reliable VIP guest at the grammar party.
Yes, that is a very common translation. For example, il pleuvait means 'it was raining'.
Almost always. If you are describing a past habit like je fumais (I used to smoke), use the imparfait.
It follows the rule perfectly. The nous form is allons, so the stem is all-, making it j'allais.
Usually, yes, because weather sets the background state of a past event, like il faisait froid.
Keep the 'e' in je mangeais to keep the 'g' soft. But in nous mangions, the 'i' already does the job, so no extra 'e' is needed.
You might see double 'i' in the nous form: nous étudiions. It looks weird but it is correct!
No. If the action is finished and specific, like j'ai mangé une pomme, use the passé composé.
Yes, for hypothetical situations. Si j'avais le temps... (If I had the time...) uses the imparfait.
No, it follows the rule. Nous faisons gives the stem fais-, so it becomes je faisais (pronounced 'fuz-ay').
Always use imparfait. Quand j'avais cinq ans... (When I was five years old...).
The ongoing action is imparfait and the interrupter is passé composé. Je dormais quand tu as frappé.
Yes. Je chantais and ils chantaient are pronounced exactly the same. It's a great hack for speaking!
Yes, remember the nous form is choisissons. The stem is choisiss-, so it becomes je choisissais.
Yes, j'allais partir means 'I was going to leave'. It sets the intention in the past.
Not really. They just have different jobs. You need both to tell any decent story.
Using the infinitive stem instead of the nous stem. Just remember: nous is your best friend here.
قواعد ذات صلة
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