Home

Mesurait

Mesurait is the third-person singular imperfect indicative form of the French verb mesurer, meaning to measure. It is used with the subject il or elle to indicate a past action or state of measuring in a non-punctual, ongoing, or habitual sense. The form illustrates how French marks imperfect aspect: the action is described as ongoing in the past rather than completed.

Morphology and related forms:

Mesurer is a regular -er verb. The imperfect endings attach to the stem mesur- to yield mesurais,

Usage notes:

The imperfect tense in French often provides background information, describes a routine action, or sets the

Translations and nuance:

In English, mesurait commonly translates as “was measuring” or “measured,” with the exact sense determined by

Relation to the noun mesur-e and related terms:

The noun mesur-e (measurement) is etymologically related to mesurer, but mesurait remains a grammatical form. It

mesurais,
mesurait,
mesurions,
mesuriez,
mesuraient.
Thus,
il
mesurait
corresponds
to
“he
was
measuring”
or
“he
measured”
in
English,
depending
on
context.
scene
in
the
past.
For
example,
“Il
mesurait
la
pièce
à
l’aide
d’un
mètre
ruban”
conveys
an
ongoing
measurement
in
progress
at
a
past
moment.
The
same
form
can
express
habitual
past
actions,
such
as
“Il
mesurait
souvent
les
murs
pour
planifier
l’aménagement,”
though
this
specific
sentence
emphasizes
repetition
over
time.
surrounding
context.
Because
it
is
a
verb
form,
mesurait
itself
is
not
used
independently
as
a
noun
or
lexical
item;
it
functions
within
the
verb
conjugation
of
mesurer.
is
part
of
standard
French
conjugation
and
appears
in
historical,
literary,
and
contemporary
text
where
past
actions
of
measuring
are
described.