Imperfect vs. Passé Composé
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Imperfect vs. Passé Composé
Bonjour Frank,
If you use L'Imparfait ( "Je ne portais jamais de lunettes avant/auparavant") in this instance, it would mean "I was never having glasses before" or "I never used to have glasses before" and not: "I've never had glasses before."
Remember that the English Present Perfect is translated in French either by Le Passé Composé or by Le Présent.
→ expressing the consequence of a past action into the present
→ reviewing a situation in the present
I hope this is helpful.
Bonne journée !
Frank, the simplest may be just to remember that ‘toujours’ and ‘jamais’ for an event from the past will virtually always trigger passé composé.
See attached link of an excellent YouTube by Hugo Cotton - the whole video is worth watching, but discussion of es at around 14 minute mark addresses ‘ advanced uses ‘ such as this :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rpQ5xeFneg
I think I disagree with that, Maarten. Both toujours and jamais could just as easily be used with the imparfait, as you explained, yourself, here:
https://kwiziq.learnfrenchwithalexa.com/questions/view/passe-compose-instead-of-imparfait
I think a better guide in this case is that the present perfect will be translated by the passé composé (or just the present) rather than the imparfait.
https://frenchtogether.com/french-present-perfect/
(She says here that there is no present perfect in French, but I would have said that the passé composé was the present perfect, but it has now also taken on the role of the passé simple, which confuses things a bit.)
Frank,
Alan is correct that imparfait can also be used with both toujours and jamais.
I should have specified that my response was intended as practical advice given that passé composé is more common than imparfait in everyday speech, and toujours and jamais are often used with passé composé for past events that are ‘still true in the present’.
The advice also aligned well with the specific example you raised, as Céline has addressed.
Have a look at the YouTube by Hugo, and the link below to Camille’s site, that he also references. 2 of the best practical discussions of imparfait and passé composé I have discovered :
https://www.frenchtoday.com/blog/french-verb-conjugation/passe-compose-versus-imparfait/
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