Last updated: 2026年6月24日
Imparfait vs Passé Composé: The Ultimate Past Tense Decision Tree

Imparfait vs Passé Composé: The Ultimate Past Tense Decision Tree
Introduction: The Past Tense Paralysis
You are describing a memory in French. You start a sentence, and then it hits you—the dreaded choice. Do you use the Passé Composé or the Imparfait?
In French, there is no single "past tense." History is split into two dimensions: what happened (action) and how it was (context).
Mistaking these tenses is one of the biggest bottlenecks keeping students trapped at the B1 level. It is also a massive scoring criteria absolute for , where storytelling is mandatory.
Part 1: The Core Distinction (The Camera Rule)
Think of yourself as a movie director filming a past scene.
- Passé Composé = The Action Camera: It films the plot moving forward. It is the characters walking through doors, dropping glasses, starting cars, and saying things.
- Imparfait = The Background/Atmosphere Camera: It sets the stage. It films the weather, the time, the environment, and the emotional state of the characters the action starts.
Part 2: The 3 Rules of Passé Composé
Use the Passé Composé for actions that are:
1. Completed with a Clear End
If you did something once and it has a definitive endpoint, it is Passé Composé.
- Example: ** J'ai fini mon livre.** (I finished my book. Done.)
Part 3: The 3 Rules of Imparfait
Use the Imparfait for creating a general description:
1. Physical Descriptions and Scenery
- Example: Il faisait beau et le soleil brillait. (The weather was beautiful and the sun was shining.)
Part 4: The Combined Sandwich (The Storyteller Framework)
When you write letters or news items (Fait Divers for TEF), you must merge them constantly to score high.
“Formula: Background (Imparfait) + Trigger (Passé Composé)
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Part 5: Common Sneaky Triggers
Certain words act as directional signs in French.
Conclusion: Practice Makes Perfect
Do not overthink it. Ask yourself: Did the action finish neatly?
- Yes $\rightarrow$ Passé Composé.
- No, it’s a setup $\rightarrow$ Imparfait.
Mastering this distinction allows you to build rich narratives flawlessly. Combine this knowledge with our speaking frameworks, and you will comfortably glide past B2 benchmarks easily!