Hi,
I'm wondering why we would say 'on a dégusté des spécialités lyonnaises' rather than 'on dégustait des spécialités lyonnaises'. I thought that we would use the imperfect in this case as it happened over an extended period of time?
Hi,
I'm wondering why we would say 'on a dégusté des spécialités lyonnaises' rather than 'on dégustait des spécialités lyonnaises'. I thought that we would use the imperfect in this case as it happened over an extended period of time?
The text just states that they went to a Restaurant to enjoy Lyonnese specialties. I understood this to have been a singular event in the past and therefore a prime candidate for the passé composé.
You'd use the imparfait if you wanted to say, e.g., that they were always eating at that restaurant during their vacation.
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