I'm confused as to why "we improved quickly" is in the passé composé rather than the imparfait. Surely the fact that they were quickly improving is an ongoing action in the past rather than something that happened "just like that" at one particular moment? (Having said that, reading the whole passage through again it clearly "feels" like it should be in the passé composé - I'm just not sure why....)
Imparfait v Passé Composé
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Jim L.Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor
Imparfait v Passé Composé
Asked 3 years ago
Chris W. Kwiziq Q&A super contributor
Using imperfect tense, this would sound to French ears as: "we were improving quickly" or "we used to improve quickly". Not the intended meaning.
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