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Parvenaient

Parvenaient is the imperfect indicative form of the French verb parvenir, used for third-person plural subjects. Parvenir means to reach, to attain, or to succeed in doing something. The imperfect parvenaient expresses an ongoing or repeated action in the past, such as ongoing progress toward a goal or a series of efforts that culminated over time.

The verb parvenir comes from Latin pervenire, meaning to arrive at or to reach, and it appears

Usage notes: parvenaient is common in literary and formal writing, especially in narratives that describe gradual

Examples:

- Ils parvenaient à franchir la frontière malgré les contrôles. (They were managing to cross the border

- Les négociations parvenaient peu à peu à un accord fragile. (The negotiations were gradually reaching a

Related forms include parvenir, parvienant (gerund form), and the past participle parvenu/parvenue.

in
both
literal
and
figurative
senses.
In
ordinary
use,
parvenir
is
often
followed
by
the
preposition
à
plus
an
infinitive,
for
example
parvenir
à
comprendre
(to
manage
to
understand)
or
parvenir
à
atteindre
un
objectif
(to
manage
to
reach
a
goal).
In
the
imperfect,
this
sense
is
extended
over
a
past
period,
as
in
Ils
parvenaient
à
résoudre
le
problème
malgré
les
obstacles.
progress,
persistence,
or
successive
attempts.
It
can
describe
collective
effort,
such
as
a
group,
organization,
or
community,
as
well
as
individuals
in
the
third
person
plural.
The
form
contrasts
with
other
tenses
of
parvenir,
such
as
parvient
(present),
parvait
(imperfect
singular),
or
sont
parvenus
(passé
composé
for
masculine
plural).
despite
the
checks.)
fragile
agreement.)