KONJUGATION AUF ENGLISCH DES VERBS HYPERBOLISE
PRESENT
Present
I hyperbolise
you hyperbolise
he/she/it hyperbolises
we hyperbolise
you hyperbolise
they hyperbolise
Present continuous
I am hyperbolising
you are hyperbolising
he/she/it is hyperbolising
we are hyperbolising
you are hyperbolising
they are hyperbolising
Present perfect
I have hyperbolised
you have hyperbolised
he/she/it has hyperbolised
we have hyperbolised
you have hyperbolised
they have hyperbolised
Present perfect continuous
I have been hyperbolising
you have been hyperbolising
he/she/it has been hyperbolising
we have been hyperbolising
you have been hyperbolising
they have been hyperbolising
PAST
Past
I hyperbolised
you hyperbolised
he/she/it hyperbolised
we hyperbolised
you hyperbolised
they hyperbolised
Past continuous
I was hyperbolising
you were hyperbolising
he/she/it was hyperbolising
we were hyperbolising
you were hyperbolising
they were hyperbolising
Past perfect
I had hyperbolised
you had hyperbolised
he/she/it had hyperbolised
we had hyperbolised
you had hyperbolised
they had hyperbolised
Past perfect continuous
I had been hyperbolising
you had been hyperbolising
he/she/it had been hyperbolising
we had been hyperbolising
you had been hyperbolising
they had been hyperbolising
FUTURE
Future
I will hyperbolise
you will hyperbolise
he/she/it will hyperbolise
we will hyperbolise
you will hyperbolise
they will hyperbolise
Future continuous
I will be hyperbolising
you will be hyperbolising
he/she/it will be hyperbolising
we will be hyperbolising
you will be hyperbolising
they will be hyperbolising
Future perfect
I will have hyperbolised
you will have hyperbolised
he/she/it will have hyperbolised
we will have hyperbolised
you will have hyperbolised
they will have hyperbolised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been hyperbolising
you will have been hyperbolising
he/she/it will have been hyperbolising
we will have been hyperbolising
you will have been hyperbolising
they will have been hyperbolising
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would hyperbolise
you would hyperbolise
he/she/it would hyperbolise
we would hyperbolise
you would hyperbolise
they would hyperbolise
Conditional continuous
I would be hyperbolising
you would be hyperbolising
he/she/it would be hyperbolising
we would be hyperbolising
you would be hyperbolising
they would be hyperbolising
Conditional perfect
I would have hyperbolise
you would have hyperbolise
he/she/it would have hyperbolise
we would have hyperbolise
you would have hyperbolise
they would have hyperbolise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been hyperbolising
you would have been hyperbolising
he/she/it would have been hyperbolising
we would have been hyperbolising
you would have been hyperbolising
they would have been hyperbolising
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you hyperbolise
we let´s hyperbolise
you hyperbolise
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to hyperbolise
Past participle
hyperbolised
Present Participle
hyperbolising
10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «HYPERBOLISE» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
hyperbolise in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
hyperbolise im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Global Television Formats: Understanding Television Across ...
The one commentator who did try to run with and hyperbolise the incident – the
ex-New Zealander wicketkeeper Ian Smith – was quickly “put in his place”. In this
instance, there was a refusal of the imperative to take the game too far from the ...
Tasha Oren, Sharon Shahaf, 2013
2
Spiers and Surenne's French and English Pronouncing ...
Parler par — , to yperboUze ; qualifier par — -, to hyperbolise ; user d' — , bo
hyperbolize. HYPBEBOLIQUE >р.г-ЬоЛЛД adj. 1. (geom.) hyperbolic;
hyperbo&cal ; 2. (rhet.) hyperbolic; hyperbolical. HYPEIiBOLIQUEMENT [i-pèr-t к-
сЛа] adv.
Alexander Spiers, George Payn Quackenbos, 1907
3
The Century dictionary and cyclopedia: a work of universal ...
In the form of a hyperbola. hyperboliform (hi-per-bori-f6rm), a. [= F.
nyperboliforme ; as hyperbola + -form.'] Having the form of a hyperbola of a
higher kind. hyperbolise, v. See hyperbolize. hyperboliam1 (ta-per'b6-lizm), n. [<
hyperbola + -ism.
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1906
Everything can change in a heartbeat.
5
The Practice of Typography: Correct Composition; a Treatise ...
... hy'brid-ize hydrogenise hydrogenize hydrogenize hy'dro-gen-ize hyperbolise
hyperbolize hyperbolize hy-per'bo-lize hypercriticise hypercriticise hypercriticize
hy-per-crit'i-cize hyperaemia hyperaemia hyperaemia hy-per-e'mi a hyphenise ...
Theodore Low De Vinne, 1902
6
Bulletin of the New York Public Library
... some of them are to meet at Boston the first thursday in September what your
honr shall direct in that case for their consideration about those matters shalbe
indeavoured My Lord however y' Duchma may hyperbolise in his narration I ca«
ot ...
7
Coalescent Argumentation
It would be easy to hyperbolise Nye, to analyze and critically dismiss her claims.
24 But it would only be easy if I were to do so relying upon the very assumptions
and framework she is criticizing. Nye does not really hold logic responsible for all
...
8
Slang. A dictionary of the turf, the ring, the chase, the ...
... when any hyperbolise the land of Yr,' 'Argumengg'ihe' (ring)—a battle; and, ' to
arguefy the topic,' —a hoxiig-liout. These were bastardly creations ofCapt.
Tophamflr, prize-fight reporter, USO—1796; this was the writer whosghve the
present ...
Jon BEE (pseud. [i.e. John Badcock.]), 1823
9
Chambers concise dictionary
[17c] □ hyperbolically adv. hyperbolic function > n, maths any of a set of
functions (sinh. cosh, tanh, etc) analogous to the trigonometrical functions.
hyperbolize or hyperbolise /hai'p3:b3laiz/ >v [hyperbolized, hyperbolizing) 1 to
represent with ...
10
Chambers's etymological dictionary of the English language
adv. Hyperbollcally. [A doublet of the above.] Hyperbolise, hl-pcr'boI-Tz, v.t. to
represent hyper- bolically.— v.i. to speak hyperboucally or with exaggeration.— »
. Hyper'boLlsm. Hyperborean, hl-pcr-bo're-an, adj. belonging to the extreme north
.
William Chambers, Andrew Findlater, 1897
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «HYPERBOLISE» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
hyperbolise im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Manuel, Mogoeng protestations offer some optimism
The problem is that most of these people crudely hyperbolise Johnson's hyperbole – only his is at least backed by half-truths. We're facing an ... «Moneyweb.co.za, Jul 15»
Da Vinci at work
It's always the way; you wait 76 years for a serious Leonardo da Vinci show and then along come two in the same year. I hyperbolise of course, ... «Newsweek - Europe, Mai 15»
Mes Que Un Game For Manchester City
There is an all-too-common tendency in football to hyperbolise every match, a symptom of the constant need to create desperation for the ... «Football365.com, Feb 15»
Worth Reading: When Games Make Us Feel Sad, Disgusted, And …
We tend to hyperbolise whatever game comes along and eeks a feeling out of us besides adrenaline because the experiences are few and far ... «Kotaku Australia, Feb 15»
Borrowed from burlesque
They expose gender corporeality, hyperbolise its libidinal charge, and dig effects that defy the cliche of the erotic dancer. "As they resist the ... «The Nation, Jan 15»
La Viola's crisis management
To understand the need to hyperbolise every problem within Serie A, one need only study Fiorentina's curious case, as Mina Rzouki explains. «Football Italia, Dez 14»
Chamberlain resigned as British PM during World War II - APC …
They have a different word for everything; you need to listen to their gibberish to appreciate this. , Without any attempt to hyperbolise these ... «DailyPost Nigeria, Nov 14»
O'Dowd: 'Dublin are well ahead of us – no excuses'
All we can do with Dublin now is hyperbolise how high they soar. It is the refuge of the lost. Mick isn't a melodramatic man and his subsequent ... «Irish Independent, Jul 14»
Some Idiot Defends the Kandy Man: The Happiness Patrol in …
But let it not go unsaid: the writer's fuddy-duddy intransigence gives no excuse to drastically hyperbolise the effects of women in power. «Doctor Who TV, Nov 13»
Kirk Page, Saskia Williscroft and Oscar Redding in series two of …
"They have the right not to understand, the right to confuse, to tease, to hyperbolise; the right not to be taken literally; to act life as a comedy and ... «The Australian, Okt 13»