CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO AGRISE
PRESENT
Present
I agrise
you agrise
he/she/it agrises
we agrise
you agrise
they agrise
Present continuous
I am agrising
you are agrising
he/she/it is agrising
we are agrising
you are agrising
they are agrising
Present perfect
I have agrised
you have agrised
he/she/it has agrised
we have agrised
you have agrised
they have agrised
Present perfect continuous
I have been agrising
you have been agrising
he/she/it has been agrising
we have been agrising
you have been agrising
they have been agrising
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 agrised
you agrised
he/she/it agrised
we agrised
you agrised
they agrised
Past continuous
I was agrising
you were agrising
he/she/it was agrising
we were agrising
you were agrising
they were agrising
Past perfect
I had agrised
you had agrised
he/she/it had agrised
we had agrised
you had agrised
they had agrised
Past perfect continuous
I had been agrising
you had been agrising
he/she/it had been agrising
we had been agrising
you had been agrising
they had been agrising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will agrise
you will agrise
he/she/it will agrise
we will agrise
you will agrise
they will agrise
Future continuous
I will be agrising
you will be agrising
he/she/it will be agrising
we will be agrising
you will be agrising
they will be agrising
Future perfect
I will have agrised
you will have agrised
he/she/it will have agrised
we will have agrised
you will have agrised
they will have agrised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been agrising
you will have been agrising
he/she/it will have been agrising
we will have been agrising
you will have been agrising
they will have been agrising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would agrise
you would agrise
he/she/it would agrise
we would agrise
you would agrise
they would agrise
Conditional continuous
I would be agrising
you would be agrising
he/she/it would be agrising
we would be agrising
you would be agrising
they would be agrising
Conditional perfect
I would have agrise
you would have agrise
he/she/it would have agrise
we would have agrise
you would have agrise
they would have agrise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been agrising
you would have been agrising
he/she/it would have been agrising
we would have been agrising
you would have been agrising
they would have been agrising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you agrise
we let´s agrise
you agrise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
agrising
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 «AGRISE»
Discover the use of
agrise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
agrise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Middle English Dictionary
3745: Ri3th also he was arise, Of his woundyng [LinI: woundyn] he was agrise. ?
a!425 *Chauliac(l) 52a/b: Signez of wlneracioun, i. wondyng, of fuse membrez. .
shal be said in her placez bynepeforb. cl425Arderne Fistula 52/5: If any man. .be
...
Hans Kurath, Robert E. Lewis, Sherman McAllister Kuhn, 2001
2
Glossary of Archaic and Provincial Words: A Supplement to ...
And pow'ring forth their blood in brutish wise, That any iron eyes to see, it would
agrise. F. Q. V. x. 28. To hide the terrour of her uncouth hew, From mortal eyes
that should be sore agrized. Ib. VII. vii. 6. My goist sa11 be present the to aggrise.
Jonathan Boucher, Joseph Hunter, Joseph Stevenson, 1832
3
Glossary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Edited by Joseph ...
And pow'ring forth their blood in brutish wise, That any iron eyes to see, it would
agrise. F. Q. V. x. 28. To hide the terrour of her uncouth hew, From mortal eyes
that should be sore agrized. Ib. VII. vii. 6. M y goist sall be present the to aggrise.
4
Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English: Containing ...
Suche rulers mowen of God agrise. The Plowman's Tale, 1. 3300. Who so take
ordirs othirwise I trowe, that they shall sore agrise. lb., 2780. The gode knyght up
aros, Of Homes wordes him agros. Kyng Horn, 1. 1328. And in his herte he ...
5
A Dictionary of the Old English Language: Compiled from ...
2317; agrise R. s. V; Chauc. C. t. d 1649; i agrise SACRAM 902; me agrlsctt Laj.
13328; agràs (prêt.) La?. 11976; a- grôs Еов. 549; Horn ed. Bits. 1326; of which
she nôujt agrôs Chauc. Troil. 2022; agrisen Jos. 236; dó purden he frigti and ...
Francis Henry Stratmann, 1878
6
The Faerie queene (continued)
But more happy he then wise, Of that seas nature did him not avise : The waves
thereof so slow and sluggish were, Engrost with mud which did them fowle agrise
,1 That every weighty thing they did upbeare, Ne ought mote ever sinck downe to
...
Edmund Spenser, John Payne Collier, 1873
7
The Monthly Repertory of English Literature, ... Or an ...
' To hide the terrour of her uncouth hew, From mortal eyes that should be sore
agrized. Ditto, b. 7. c.7- at. 6. p. 334; My goist sail be present the to aggrise.
Douglas, p. :13. l. 11. Such rulers mowen of God agrise. ' The Plowman's Tale.
Urry, p.
8
The Monthly Repertory of English Literature
To hide the tenour of her uncouth hew, From mortal eyes that should be sore
agrizcdDitto, b. 7. en). :1. 6. p. 334; My 50in all be present the to aggrise. Douglas
, p. ll3. l. 17Such rulers mowen of God agrise. r The Plowman's Tale. Urry, p. 18:. l
.
9
The Poetical Works of Skelton and Donne: With a Memoir of Each
Compare ; " Sore might hir agrise." Arthour and Merlin, p. 34. ed. Abbotsf. " Of his
sweuen sore him agros." Marie Maudelein, p. 226,^Turnbull's Legenda
Cathoticse (from the Auchinleck MS.). " The kinges herle of pitec gan agrise." .
Chaucer's ...
John Skelton, John Donne, Alexander Dyce, 1879
10
A Glossarial Index to the Printed English Literature of the ...
Alys. 3309 Agrief, adv. Alys. 3785 Agrill, v. a.=annoy. [a-grulle]. O. and N. 1108. I
AS. grillan Agrise, v. a. =terrify. RG. 463. pret. ' agros.' RG. 549. part. ' agrise,' =
frightened. RG. 539. 'To agrise him,'= become furious. K. Horn, 895. AS. agrisan .
2 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «AGRISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
agrise is used in the context of the following news items.
A rich box of delights: A short guide to medieval literature
Promised heavenly rewards for jumping in the well's other bucket, “the wolf gon sinke, the vox arise; / tho [be]gon the wolf [to be] sore agrise ... «The Mancunion, Mar 15»
Rachel's recipes: Elderflower syrup
If gooseberries are available, (Agrise) the combination with elderflower is a magical one, actually one of my favorite elderflower recipes is ... «Romania-Insider.com, May 12»