CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO AESTHETICISE
PRESENT
Present
I aestheticise
you aestheticise
he/she/it aestheticises
we aestheticise
you aestheticise
they aestheticise
Present continuous
I am aestheticising
you are aestheticising
he/she/it is aestheticising
we are aestheticising
you are aestheticising
they are aestheticising
Present perfect
I have aestheticised
you have aestheticised
he/she/it has aestheticised
we have aestheticised
you have aestheticised
they have aestheticised
Present perfect continuous
I have been aestheticising
you have been aestheticising
he/she/it has been aestheticising
we have been aestheticising
you have been aestheticising
they have been aestheticising
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 aestheticised
you aestheticised
he/she/it aestheticised
we aestheticised
you aestheticised
they aestheticised
Past continuous
I was aestheticising
you were aestheticising
he/she/it was aestheticising
we were aestheticising
you were aestheticising
they were aestheticising
Past perfect
I had aestheticised
you had aestheticised
he/she/it had aestheticised
we had aestheticised
you had aestheticised
they had aestheticised
Past perfect continuous
I had been aestheticising
you had been aestheticising
he/she/it had been aestheticising
we had been aestheticising
you had been aestheticising
they had been aestheticising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will aestheticise
you will aestheticise
he/she/it will aestheticise
we will aestheticise
you will aestheticise
they will aestheticise
Future continuous
I will be aestheticising
you will be aestheticising
he/she/it will be aestheticising
we will be aestheticising
you will be aestheticising
they will be aestheticising
Future perfect
I will have aestheticised
you will have aestheticised
he/she/it will have aestheticised
we will have aestheticised
you will have aestheticised
they will have aestheticised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been aestheticising
you will have been aestheticising
he/she/it will have been aestheticising
we will have been aestheticising
you will have been aestheticising
they will have been aestheticising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would aestheticise
you would aestheticise
he/she/it would aestheticise
we would aestheticise
you would aestheticise
they would aestheticise
Conditional continuous
I would be aestheticising
you would be aestheticising
he/she/it would be aestheticising
we would be aestheticising
you would be aestheticising
they would be aestheticising
Conditional perfect
I would have aestheticise
you would have aestheticise
he/she/it would have aestheticise
we would have aestheticise
you would have aestheticise
they would have aestheticise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been aestheticising
you would have been aestheticising
he/she/it would have been aestheticising
we would have been aestheticising
you would have been aestheticising
they would have been aestheticising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you aestheticise
we let´s aestheticise
you aestheticise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to aestheticise
Past participle
aestheticised
Present Participle
aestheticising
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 «AESTHETICISE»
Discover the use of
aestheticise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
aestheticise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Similarly, Hirst (1980: 6) says that 'the role of the arts in education is to
aestheticise people'. This is a view which he still holds (see his paper, 1989: 38—
43, and also the incisive reply by McFee 1989: 33—7). Quite apart from the
current issue, ...
J. Mark Halstead, Terence H. McLaughlin, 2005
2
The Professions in Contemporary Drama
... the accusatory and violent ending of The Royal National Theatre version of
Harrison's play is directed at an audience which has been shaped and is thus
implicated in an imperialistic heritage which has not only continued to
aestheticise art, ...
Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe, 2003
3
Deconstructing International Politics
As it is already corporeal, challenging politics on these grounds is not to
aestheticise or corporealise politics at all. The politics of cognition is always
already thoroughly corporealised and aes- theticised in its own existing ways.
The challenge ...
4
Photography and Landscape
It was, however, a deliberate ploy on the part of the editors (myself included) in
designing the photography for this book, the first and still the only book about
Western Australian wetlands, to aestheticise wetlands (as they largely have ...
Rodney James Giblett, Juha Pentti Tolonen, 2012
5
The Postcolonial Unconscious
What the poet seeks to aestheticise, the woman herself seems – or at least this is
the poet's intuition – to refuse to look at except with mundane eyes; not because
she lacks imagination, but because just as a stone is a stone, so the hard work ...
6
Shakespeare Survey: Volume 55, King Lear and Its Afterlife: ...
Judith Hawley has argued that the nineteenth century saw a critical division
along gendered lines; and that while the male Romantic critics tended to '
aestheticise and psychologise Shakespeare', women showed a persistent
concern with, ...
7
Dramas of the Past on the Twentieth-century Stage: In ...
... subject the past to the allegorising process of narrative treatment and, in doing
so, aestheticise its brutality. In Travesties, the transformation of war into art also
occurs at the level ofthe individual character. Throughout the first act, 'the mud ...
... aspect of the experience he was interested in. Unlike Zola, who often sought to
make political capital out of social injustice or economic distress in his novels,
Huysmans' prose poems aestheticise their subjects rather than politicise them.
9
Present Hope: Philosophy, Architecture, Judaism
There is an initial problem attached to this second form of transformation since
linking the Shoah to such a conception of experience may appear to aestheticise
it, turning it into an occurrence whose register has marked similarities to the ...
10
White Boys, White Noise: Masculinities and 1980s Indie ...
The verb 'replay' is no accident: media - TV, films, pop music - provide the
melancholic soul with a potentially infinite series of replayable, mediated
moments for him to masochistically relive and aestheticise his pain. 'What came
first, the music ...
Dr Matthew Bannister, 2013
10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «AESTHETICISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
aestheticise is used in the context of the following news items.
Song of the summer: What will be filling the air - and the airwaves …
We use the songs stored in our hand-held devices to aestheticise our morning jogs, our daily commutes, our afternoon tea breaks and our ... «The Independent, Jun 15»
Tyler, the Creator: Cherry Bomb review – fizzy sonics and a splurge …
... whose remix of Odd Future's French remains one of the most incredible attempts ever to aestheticise the repulsive. (See also: Cherry Bomb's ... «The Guardian, Apr 15»
Salt and Silver, Tate Britain
Photography's ability to indiscriminately aestheticise is a dilemma that has continued to present itself ever since, especially in the fields of ... «The Arts Desk, Feb 15»
Meaningful memory
When confronted with silent violence and vulgar disparity of life, the natural instinct is always to aestheticise. To create them in our mirror image ... «The Hindu, Jan 15»
Film review: Electricity
Higgins clearly intended this to be an “issue film”; if only he did more to probe the issue of neurological disorders, and less to aestheticise it. «CITY A.M., Dec 14»
Wounding the World review – 'an essential polemic'
“It almost always leads to self-hatred, shame and guilt – and yet people are constantly inventing ways to aestheticise it and make it enjoyable. «The Guardian, Nov 14»
Emily Carr, Dulwich Picture Gallery
... for Canada's native peoples, as an artist and as a member of the colonial population, she could not help but aestheticise what she saw. «The Arts Desk, Nov 14»
Aestheticising The Everyday: An Interview With Ben Vida
The idea is that you take that recalibration and go back out into the world and maybe all of a sudden you're able to aestheticise the everyday. «The Quietus, Oct 14»
Death and horror: there's no spectacle we so eagerly pursue – but …
... posed particularly sharply for photos taken in the service not of art but of journalism, a field supposed to inform rather than aestheticise. «The Guardian, Sep 14»
Ferdinand Mount
It was to be Burke's key criticism of the French revolutionaries 35 years later that they sought to aestheticise politics; they titillated their public by ... «London Review of Books, Aug 14»