14 Study Notes Imperfect
14 Study Notes Imperfect
14 Study Notes Imperfect
Level 2
Lesson notes
Lesson 14
Study notes
I’ve used war - wéi war däi Weekend? And that is obviously of the
verb sinn and in the imperfect tense. That is another past tense.
Conjugating Verbs
sinn
sinn: to be (imperfect tense)
ech war mir waren
du waars dir / Dir waart
hien / hatt / Si war si waren
But if you don’t know exactly the date when talking in the past you
can either use fréier meaning “earlier” in the sense of earlier in the
past or deemools more in the sense of “at that time”. You can use
fréier or deemools for something that happened any time ago. For
example you are talking with your family about Christmas 10 years
ago and you wanted to say: “At that time I always wore black
clothes”:
Think of the et gëtt x construction (literally "it gives x") as saying "x
exists". When you ask Gëtt et en Dessert? you're asking if there is
any desert present.
You could therefore ask Gëtt et een …., deen….? to ask if
someone exists in a more general context, for instance, if you're to
tired to drive home you might ask Gëtt et een, dee mech
heembrénge kann? "Is there someone who can take me home?".
In this case, you don't really care about that person's precise
location, just whether or not there exists someone who can take you
home. Alternatively, if you hear a knock at the door, you might call,
Ass een do? to mean "Is someone there?", as you are in this case
asking not if the person exists, but if they are standing in front of
your door.
A simpler (though less precise) explanation might be that when is/
are/was/etc... and there are next to each other in the English
sentence, you should use the et gëtt/gouf expression, while when
the there is not next to the form of to be, you probably want to
translate literally, using do and a form of sinn.
Let’s learn how to say “When I was a child …” For this we need a
subordinate clause and we use wéi for “when”.
Why don’t we use wéini which means also “when”?
Wéini is only used for questions for example Wéini fiert den
Zuch? Wéini gees du heem? “When does the train leave?” or
“when do you come home”. But to say “when I was a child” use wéi.
Now you may have heard the word wann which means as well
“when”. When we use wann we talk about things that happen either
in the present so regularly or in the future. I give you an example for
something happening regularly. Example:
Jo, ech hat ëmmer gutt Punkten an der Schoul. Ech war e Streber.
Yes, I always had good marks at school. I was a ….
Here we have “when you” which translates when talking in the past
by wéi s du. We put an s between wéi. This only works for du.
And you have the same rule with wann and du:
Ech war vläicht 28, wéi ech mäin éischten Handy kaaft hunn.
I was maybe 28, when I bought my first mobile phone.