CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO ADULTERISE
PRESENT
Present
I adulterise
you adulterise
he/she/it adulterises
we adulterise
you adulterise
they adulterise
Present continuous
I am adulterising
you are adulterising
he/she/it is adulterising
we are adulterising
you are adulterising
they are adulterising
Present perfect
I have adulterised
you have adulterised
he/she/it has adulterised
we have adulterised
you have adulterised
they have adulterised
Present perfect continuous
I have been adulterising
you have been adulterising
he/she/it has been adulterising
we have been adulterising
you have been adulterising
they have been adulterising
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The
present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I adulterised
you adulterised
he/she/it adulterised
we adulterised
you adulterised
they adulterised
Past continuous
I was adulterising
you were adulterising
he/she/it was adulterising
we were adulterising
you were adulterising
they were adulterising
Past perfect
I had adulterised
you had adulterised
he/she/it had adulterised
we had adulterised
you had adulterised
they had adulterised
Past perfect continuous
I had been adulterising
you had been adulterising
he/she/it had been adulterising
we had been adulterising
you had been adulterising
they had been adulterising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will adulterise
you will adulterise
he/she/it will adulterise
we will adulterise
you will adulterise
they will adulterise
Future continuous
I will be adulterising
you will be adulterising
he/she/it will be adulterising
we will be adulterising
you will be adulterising
they will be adulterising
Future perfect
I will have adulterised
you will have adulterised
he/she/it will have adulterised
we will have adulterised
you will have adulterised
they will have adulterised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been adulterising
you will have been adulterising
he/she/it will have been adulterising
we will have been adulterising
you will have been adulterising
they will have been adulterising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would adulterise
you would adulterise
he/she/it would adulterise
we would adulterise
you would adulterise
they would adulterise
Conditional continuous
I would be adulterising
you would be adulterising
he/she/it would be adulterising
we would be adulterising
you would be adulterising
they would be adulterising
Conditional perfect
I would have adulterise
you would have adulterise
he/she/it would have adulterise
we would have adulterise
you would have adulterise
they would have adulterise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been adulterising
you would have been adulterising
he/she/it would have been adulterising
we would have been adulterising
you would have been adulterising
they would have been adulterising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you adulterise
we let´s adulterise
you adulterise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
adulterised
Present Participle
adulterising
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The
present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The
past participle shows the action after completion.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ADULTERISE»
Discover the use of
adulterise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
adulterise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The works: Being the sum of his sermons, meditations, and ...
Where did God ever will thee to lie, to swear, to oppress, to adulterise ? His will is
his word ; and where findest thou his word commanding sin 1 And shall God's
prescience make him guilty of thy evil ? Then must thy memory make thee guilty
of ...
2
The works of Thomas Adams: being the sum of his sermons, ...
Where did God ever will thee to lie, to swear, to oppress, to adulterise 1 His will is
his word ; and where findest thou his word commanding sin ? And shall God's
prescience make him guilty of thy evil ? Then must thy memory make thee guilty
of ...
3
The Georgics of Virgil in Heroic Couplets ... By ... E. ...
... that pass, delight to dwell On portals all inlaid with tortoise shell ; And vestures
trick'd with gold, and bronzes rare ; And the' no Tyrian dye your fleeces wear, And
the pure olive-oil knows no disguise Of scents, commingling to adulterise ; Yet, ...
Virgil, Edward COBBOLD, 1852
4
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the English Romantic School
... to adulterise my time by absenting me from my wife." And the wife not only
shared his society, but also all the delights of his fancy. He discoursed to her on
Spenser's giants, and on Ossian's heroes ; on the wonderful connection between
the ...
not to adulterise my time by absenting myself from my wife.' He stared into the fire
. Coleridge enjoying himself with the word 'adulterise'. His had been a bad
marriage, but not at this time, not yet. He thought of his own marriages and shut
his ...
Patrick Joseph Kavanagh, 1986
6
Chambers English-Hindi Dictionary
adulterise, -ize (arch.) Рнтчг ЧТТгП; ^TR 4S4 ^T^t; fl^'- adulterous ajfîmft, зтт^ а*
ПЙ; n- adultery adumbrate v.í. ЗТЧтет чгглт; «fs^i srcgcT чгглт; ^pt4W ^тт; п.
adumbration si4í+h; whi ; зрйчи adune аф'. Ч^, 1?т fsrr; also aduncate, -d,
aduncous ...
Sureśa Avasthī, Indujā Avasthī, 1981
7
Fiction of Unknown or Questionable Attribution, 2
... of following traditions rather than the word of God: 'the Law of God forbids
adultery, yea or to covet your neighbours wife, and this tradition [that is,
valentines], if it adulterise not, yet at least it alters just and lawfull affections' (182-
83).
Erin Henriksen, Desma Polydorou, Woman of quality, 2006
-4 The Beggar used to adulterise and fornicate. (91. Beggar.) i used to take IT "
And ofte it fals was bat I swoer or spak. 631 tal»e oaths for * «"'"• ffor be desire
ferue'nt of couetyse ffonde1 in periiirie no defaute or lak, But euer entyced me fat
in ...
Thomas Hoccleve, Frederick James Furnivall, Sir Israel Gollancz, 1897
9
Œuvres complètes [de Mathurin Régnier]
... et son renom 240 Entre les vertueux ne veuille avoir du nom. Voilla comme à
present chacun l'adulterise 5 1 . Il ne s'agissait pas seulement d'inventer un air
de ballet, mais il fallait composer tout un poème avec vers, ou stances, emœbées
.
Mathurin Régnier, Gabriel Raibaud, 1958
10
Handbook for Berkshire: Including Windsor, Reading, ...
Abingdon, Earl of, 126, 128, 129. “ABSTRACT OF LAWS," 122. Achanl Family, 50
, 84. "ADAM AND E\1:,"111. Adderbwry, Richard (le, 71, 72. ADELAIDE Lows, 20.
ADULTERISE CASTLES, xi. 65, 117. 1ESCESDUN, see Ashdown, ELFRIC, 78 ...
John Murray (Firm), Augustus John Cuthbert Hare, John Meade Falkner, 1902
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «ADULTERISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
adulterise is used in the context of the following news items.
Julie Burchill: Something's wrong when it's only men who take out …
We drink, gamble, adulterise – but we don't tend to go around flashing our money at judges and whining for them to muzzle our exes. When I ... «The Independent, Apr 11»