French I - The Imperfect

This document provides study materials related to French I - The Imperfect. It may include explanations, summarized notes, examples, or practice questions designed to help students understand key concepts and review important topics covered in their coursework.

Students studying Music or related courses can use this material as a reference when preparing for assignments, exams, or classroom discussions. Resources on CramX may include study notes, exam guides, solutions, lecture summaries, and other academic learning materials.

Maria
Contributor
4.7
35
1 day ago
Preview (6 of 19 Pages)
100%
Log in to unlock

Page 1

French I - The Imperfect - Page 1 preview image

Loading page ...

Study GuideFrench IThe Imperfect1.Imperfect Tense and Regular Verbs1. What the Imperfect Tense IsTheimperfect tense (l’imparfait)is used to describepast actions that were ongoing, repeated, orhabitual. It often corresponds to English expressions such as:was doingused to dowould do (in the past)Example:Je jouais au tennis.I was playing tennis / I used to play tennis.

Page 2

French I - The Imperfect - Page 2 preview image

Loading page ...

Study Guide2. How to Form the ImperfectTo form the imperfect tense formost verbs, follow these steps:Step 1: Use the nous form of the present tenseExample verbs:jouer→ nousjouonsfinir→ nousfinissonsrendre→ nousrendonsStep 2: Remove-onsThis gives theimperfect stem:jou-finiss-rend-Step 3: Add the imperfect endingsSubjectEndingje-aistu-aisil / elle / on-aitnous-ionsvous-iezils / elles-aient

Page 3

French I - The Imperfect - Page 3 preview image

Loading page ...

Study Guide3. Examples with Regular Verbsjouer (to play)SubjectFormjejouaistujouaisil/ellejouaitnousjouionsvousjouiezils/ellesjouaientfinir (to finish)SubjectFormjefinissaistufinissaisil/ellefinissaitnousfinissionsvousfinissiezils/ellesfinissaient

Page 4

French I - The Imperfect - Page 4 preview image

Loading page ...

Study Guiderendre (to return)SubjectFormjerendaisturendaisil/ellerendaitnousrendionsvousrendiezils/ellesrendaient4. Important Note About Irregular VerbsAlmost all verbs follow the same rule for forming the imperfect.Theonly completely irregular verbis:être (to be)Imperfect forms:j’étaistu étaisil étaitnous étionsvous étiezils étaientThe stemét-is used instead of the normal rule.

Page 5

French I - The Imperfect - Page 5 preview image

Loading page ...

Study GuideKey TakeawayTo form theimperfect tense:1.Take thenous form of the present tense.2.Remove-ons.3.Add the imperfect endings:-ais-ais-ait-ions-iez-aientThe imperfect is commonly used to describeongoing actions, repeated habits, and backgrounddescriptions in the past.2.Imperfect Verbs with Spelling Changes1. Why Spelling Changes OccurSome French verbs slightlychange their spelling in the imperfect tenseto keep thecorrectpronunciation.These changes happen mainly with verbs ending in:-cer-gerThe spelling change ensures that thesoft sound of the consonant is preserved.2. Verbs Ending in-cerFor verbs ending in-cer, thec becomes çbefore the lettera.This keeps thesoft “s” soundof the letterc.

Page 6

French I - The Imperfect - Page 6 preview image

Loading page ...

Study GuideThis change occurs only in the“shoe” formsof the verb (je, tu, il/elle/on, ils/elles).Example:avancer (to advance)SubjectImperfect Formjeavançaistuavançaisil/elleavançaitnousavancionsvousavanciezils/ellesavançaientNotice:nous avancionsandvous avanciezdonotneedçbecause theialready keeps the softsound.3. Verbs Ending in-gerFor verbs ending in-ger, add asilent ebetweenganda.This keeps thesoft “zh” soundofg.Again, the change occurs mainly in the“shoe” forms.Example:nager (to swim)SubjectImperfect Formjenageaistunageais
Preview Mode

This document has 19 pages. Sign in to access the full document!