Had + participe : l’action d’avant l’action
Bonne nouvelle : had + participe passé fonctionne comme notre plus-que-parfait (« j’avais fini »). Il situe une action AVANT une autre action passée.
When we arrived, the film had started. (Quand nous sommes arrivés, le film avait commencé.)
She had never flown before that day.
Had (toutes personnes) + participe passé. Contraction : ’d.
I’d already eaten. · He hadn’t finished. · Had you met before?
⚠ ’d peut être had OU would : ’d + participe = had ; ’d + base verbale = would.
Deux actions passées ? La plus ancienne prend had + participe, la plus récente le prétérit.
The train had left when I got to the station. (1. le train part → 2. j’arrive)
Comparez : The train left when I got there. (il est parti à ce moment-là)
Mots déclencheurs typiques : after, before, by the time, already, just, never... before.
After she had left, I found her keys.
By the time we got there, everything had been eaten.
Le past perfect est aussi la forme du recul (said + had done) et du regret (wish + had done) — vous l’avez déjà croisé.
He said he had finished. · I wish I had known!
Les pièges classiques pour les francophones
Voici les erreurs que les francophones font le plus souvent sur ce point.