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marchaient

Marchaient is the third person plural imperfect indicative form of the French verb marcher, meaning to walk. It translates to “they were walking” or “they used to walk” in English and is used to describe ongoing or habitual actions in the past.

Formation and forms: The imperfect is formed from the nous form of the present tense (nous marchons)

Usage: Marchaient is used to describe actions in the past without a defined beginning or end, to

Examples: Ils marchaient lentement sous la pluie. Ils marchaient vers l’école tous les matins.

Notes: Marcher has related forms in other tenses and moods, such as marchent (present, ils/elles), marche (present,

with
the
endings
-ais,
-ais,
-ait,
-ions,
-iez,
-aient.
Therefore
marchaient
consists
of
the
stem
march-
plus
the
ending
-aient.
The
full
imperfect
paradigm
for
marcher
is:
je
marchais,
tu
marchais,
il/elle
marchait,
nous
marchions,
vous
marchiez,
ils/elles
marchaient.
set
the
scene,
or
to
express
habitual
past
actions.
In
narrative,
it
often
appears
alongside
other
imperfect
verbs
and
can
be
contrasted
with
completed
actions
expressed
in
the
passé
composé
or
other
past
tenses.
It
is
not
used
for
single,
completed
past
events.
il/elle),
and
marché
(past
participle).
As
a
verb
form,
marchaient
functions
strictly
as
a
past
imperfect
construction
and
is
not
a
standalone
noun.