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French Grammar Tenses Pluperfect of the indicative
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French Grammar Tenses Pluperfect of the indicative
In French the
pluperfect is called
le plus-que-parfait. In English, it is also called the
more than perfect.
EditFormation
- The pluperfect is a compound tense - it consists of two verbs, the auxiliary verb and the past participle of the verb one seeks to use in this tense.
- The auxiliary verb is conjugated as if it were being used in the imperfect.
- The past participle is added immediately after the auxiliary verb.
- A negative structure such as ne ... pas is always placed around the auxiliary verb, immediately before the past participle.
- All past participle agreement rules that apply to composed tenses apply to the pluperfect.
EditUsage
The pluperfect is used to describe a past action that occurred before a second past action that is in the
passé composé or
imparfait.
- Elle était vieux, mais elle avait été jeune. - She was old, but she had been young.
- Je l'aurais aidé si j'avais su. - I would've help him if I had known.
- J'étais parti(e) quand tu m'as téléphoné. - I had already left when you called (me).
For learning French | Category Uncategorized | Level Unspecified |
Second language English | Created Jul 16, 2008 16:59 | Views 894 |
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