CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO APPUY
PRESENT
Present
I appuy
you appuy
he/she/it appuys
we appuy
you appuy
they appuy
Present continuous
I am appuying
you are appuying
he/she/it is appuying
we are appuying
you are appuying
they are appuying
Present perfect
I have appuyed
you have appuyed
he/she/it has appuyed
we have appuyed
you have appuyed
they have appuyed
Present perfect continuous
I have been appuying
you have been appuying
he/she/it has been appuying
we have been appuying
you have been appuying
they have been appuying
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 appuyed
you appuyed
he/she/it appuyed
we appuyed
you appuyed
they appuyed
Past continuous
I was appuying
you were appuying
he/she/it was appuying
we were appuying
you were appuying
they were appuying
Past perfect
I had appuyed
you had appuyed
he/she/it had appuyed
we had appuyed
you had appuyed
they had appuyed
Past perfect continuous
I had been appuying
you had been appuying
he/she/it had been appuying
we had been appuying
you had been appuying
they had been appuying
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will appuy
you will appuy
he/she/it will appuy
we will appuy
you will appuy
they will appuy
Future continuous
I will be appuying
you will be appuying
he/she/it will be appuying
we will be appuying
you will be appuying
they will be appuying
Future perfect
I will have appuyed
you will have appuyed
he/she/it will have appuyed
we will have appuyed
you will have appuyed
they will have appuyed
Future perfect continuous
I will have been appuying
you will have been appuying
he/she/it will have been appuying
we will have been appuying
you will have been appuying
they will have been appuying
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would appuy
you would appuy
he/she/it would appuy
we would appuy
you would appuy
they would appuy
Conditional continuous
I would be appuying
you would be appuying
he/she/it would be appuying
we would be appuying
you would be appuying
they would be appuying
Conditional perfect
I would have appuy
you would have appuy
he/she/it would have appuy
we would have appuy
you would have appuy
they would have appuy
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been appuying
you would have been appuying
he/she/it would have been appuying
we would have been appuying
you would have been appuying
they would have been appuying
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you appuy
we let´s appuy
you appuy
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
appuying
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 «APPUY»
Discover the use of
appuy in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
appuy and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Jean-Marie LeClair: Sonatas for Violin and Basso Continuo, ...
Aldrich lists several, some of which seem applicable to the Leclair sonatas. In the
cadence avec un appuy (or cadence appuyee), the first note, the upper auxiliary,
is held for some time before the oscillation begins. In Leclair's time the appuy ...
Jean-Marie LeClair, Robert E. Preston, 1968
2
Heresy and Orthodoxy in Sixteenth Century Paris: François Le ...
Aucunesfois en ce monde nous prendrons alliance en une maison pour avoir
appuy. Le colloqueray ma fille un tel lieu pour avoir port & faveur. C'est done a
dire que ce n'est pas pen, estre bien appuye. Un homme qui a port & faveur du
Roy, ...
3
La Philosophie Chr Tienne: Expos E, Claircie, D Montr E Et ...
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.
Jean-Philippe Dutoit-Membrini, 2012
4
The royal dictionary abridged in two parts: I. French and ...
Appuy, S. M. (foutien, fup port) a Prop, a Stay. tí" Hauteur d'appui, Breafl- height.
Un mur i hauteur d'ap- puy, a Wall breafl-high. * Appui, (foutien dans le figuré)
fupport, flrerrgth, prop, defence. * Appuy (faveur, aide, protection) countenance, ...
5
The Royal Dictionary: Abridged in Two Parts, I French and ...
Appuy, 5. bí. (foutien, fup- port) a Pr.p, a Stay. tö"" Hauteur d'appui, Breaß- height.
Un mur i hauteur d'ap- puy, a Will breaß-high. * Appui, (foutien dans le figuré)
fupptnt , ßrength, prop, defence. ' лрриу (faveur, aide, protection) countenance, ...
6
The History and Art of Horsemanship
in case lie is heavy in the hand ; and if his appuy be too strong, it will lighten him.
There are some horsemen who mark each motion of the horse in his gallop, by
moving their body and head ; they ought, however, without stiffness or constraint,
...
Richard Berenger, Claude Bourgelat, Xenephon, 1771
7
The history and art of horsemanship. [With] Xenophon's ...
in case he is heavy in the hand ; and if his appuy be tod strong, it will lighten him.
There are some horsemen who mark each motion of the horse in his gallop, by
moving their body and head ; they ought, however, without stiffness or constraint,
...
8
Enterprise Interoperability: I-ESA'12 Proceedings
<AttributeValue DataType="abstraction:function"> <Apply FunctionId="or"> <
Appuy FunctionId="isUserDirectContact"> <SubjectAttributeDesignator Att:
ibute1d="username" DataType="string" /> <Appuy Functionld="abstraction:
paraml"/> ...
Martin Zelm, Raquel Sanchis, Raul Poler, 2012
9
Ornamentation in Baroque and Post-baroque Music: With ...
Speaking in his vocal treatise of the trill (his term: cadence, his symbol: +), he
distinguishes two basic forms: "with preparation" (avec support [in later editions
replaced by appuy]) and "without preparation" (sans support).10 Though the
English ...
10
British Manly Exercises, Containing Rowing and Sailing, ...
This is called the appuy. While this relation is preserved between the hand and
mouth, the horse is in perfect obedience to the rider, and the hand directs him, in
any position or action, with such ease, that the horse seems to work by the will of
...