Bonjour Steve,
Thanks for your comment, but you're mistaken. "Didn't" is already in the past tense, so must be followed by the base form of the verb "use," just as we say "didn't want" and "didn't like" and not xx"didn't wanted"xx and xx"didn't liked"xx
The translation for the third item should read... Sarah didn't used to trust Thomas
- « Back to Q&A Forum
- « Previous questionNext question »
steve g.Kwiziq community member
The translation for the third item should read... Sarah didn't used to trust Thomas
This question relates to:French lesson "Faire confiance (à) = To trust (French Expressions with faire)"
Asked 8 years ago
Sandra L.Kwiziq community member
I am no grammarian, but use and used to in my mind don't mean the same thing and aren't pronounced the same way with "ed" at the end, depending on usage. We don't "use trust", we trust. Used to is past tense in my mind. Use is a verb for utility, like I use a knife to cut. Or I used a knife yesterday. But it's pronounced differently to show past tense, not utility. I used to trust Thomas. or I didn't used to trust Thomas, but now I do. Strange sounding to my ear. Guess I am wrong by rules of grammar!
Don't have an account yet? Join today
Ask a question
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level