222,807
edits
m (Quick edit) |
|||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
In summary, the passé composé, imparfait, plus-que-parfait, and passé antérieur are other tenses in French that indicate the time at which events occur relative to other events. The passé composé is used for completed actions, the imparfait for ongoing or repeated actions, the plus-que-parfait for actions that took place before another action in the past, and the passé antérieur for a more formal or literary style of writing. | In summary, the passé composé, imparfait, plus-que-parfait, and passé antérieur are other tenses in French that indicate the time at which events occur relative to other events. The passé composé is used for completed actions, the imparfait for ongoing or repeated actions, the plus-que-parfait for actions that took place before another action in the past, and the passé antérieur for a more formal or literary style of writing. | ||
{{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | {{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | ||
<span links></span> |
edits