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remîtes

Remîtes is the second-person plural form of the passé simple conjugation of the French verb remettre. It denotes a past action of putting back, restoring, or rescheduling, depending on context. In modern French, the passé simple is mainly used in literary writing, so remîtes is rarely used in everyday speech but may appear in novels, historical narratives, or formal chronicles.

Morphology and forms: Remettre is a regular -re verb, and in the passé simple the endings are

Usage and context: Remîtes would be encountered when narrating actions completed in the past addressed to “you”

Notes: The term remîtes does not function as an independent lexical entry outside its grammatical role; it

-is,
-is,
-it,
-îmes,
-îtes,
-irent.
The
full
set
for
remettre
is:
je
remis,
tu
remis,
il
remit,
nous
remîmes,
vous
remîtes,
ils
remirent.
The
form
remîtes
specifically
corresponds
to
the
second-person
plural.
(plural)
in
a
literary
past
tense.
It
is
not
used
in
everyday
speech
except
in
archaic
or
stylized
registers.
For
example:
Vous
remîtes
les
objets
à
leur
place
avant
de
quitter
la
pièce.
is
a
historical
or
literary
conjugation
form
rather
than
a
separate
word
with
its
own
meaning.
In
modern
prose,
the
passé
composé
or
other
tenses
would
more
commonly
convey
similar
meaning,
while
remîtes
remains
primarily
of
interest
for
linguistic
study
of
French
verb
inflection.