Erant
Erant is the third-person plural imperfect indicative form of the Latin verb esse, meaning “to be.” It expresses a past, ongoing state or condition, commonly translated as “they were” or, in contexts of existence, “there were.” The verb esse is irregular, and its imperfect forms derive from the archaic stem er-, giving eram, eras, erat, eramus, eratis, erant. As a result, erant is the standard past-tense form for “they were” in narrative and descriptive passages.
In usage, erant indicates background or continuing circumstances in past time. It appears in many Latin texts
Erant contrasts with sunt (present) and erunt (future), and with fuerant (pluperfect). Like other forms of esse,