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récapitulais

Récapitulais is the imperfect indicative form of the French verb récapituler, which means to summarize or to recapitulate. It denotes an ongoing or habitual action in the past, as in recounting main points over a period or repeating the same activity.

Etymology and form: récapituler comes from the prefix ré- plus capitul- derived from Latin caput (head) and

Usage: The imperfect is used to describe past actions without a defined endpoint, often as background or

Related terms: The noun récapitulatif or récapitulation refers to a summary or a recap itself, while récapitulier

See also: résumé, récapitulatif, récapitulation.

capitulum
(a
little
head
or
heading),
originally
meaning
to
recount
the
main
points
or
to
provide
a
recap.
In
the
imperfect
tense,
the
singular
forms
are
je
récapitulais
and
tu
récapitulais,
while
il
récapitulait,
and
the
plural
forms
are
nous
récapitulions,
vous
récapituliez,
ils
récapitaient.
The
word
is
strictly
a
verb
form
rather
than
a
stand-alone
noun.
repeated
activity.
Récapitulais
can
appear
in
narrative
or
explanatory
contexts
to
indicate
that
the
speaker
was
summarizing
information
over
time.
It
contrasts
with
the
passé
composé
or
passé
simple,
which
describe
completed
actions.
Examples:
«Je
récapitulais
les
points
principaux
à
chaque
étape
du
rapport.»
«Tu
récapitulais
souvent
les
conclusions
avant
chaque
présentation.»
In
everyday
writing,
this
form
situates
the
recap
activity
in
the
past
rather
than
presenting
a
single
finished
recap.
is
the
verb
form
that
carries
the
action
of
summarizing.