CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO BEMOUTH
PRESENT
Present
I bemouth
you bemouth
he/she/it bemouths
we bemouth
you bemouth
they bemouth
Present continuous
I am bemouthing
you are bemouthing
he/she/it is bemouthing
we are bemouthing
you are bemouthing
they are bemouthing
Present perfect
I have bemouthed
you have bemouthed
he/she/it has bemouthed
we have bemouthed
you have bemouthed
they have bemouthed
Present perfect continuous
I have been bemouthing
you have been bemouthing
he/she/it has been bemouthing
we have been bemouthing
you have been bemouthing
they have been bemouthing
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 bemouthed
you bemouthed
he/she/it bemouthed
we bemouthed
you bemouthed
they bemouthed
Past continuous
I was bemouthing
you were bemouthing
he/she/it was bemouthing
we were bemouthing
you were bemouthing
they were bemouthing
Past perfect
I had bemouthed
you had bemouthed
he/she/it had bemouthed
we had bemouthed
you had bemouthed
they had bemouthed
Past perfect continuous
I had been bemouthing
you had been bemouthing
he/she/it had been bemouthing
we had been bemouthing
you had been bemouthing
they had been bemouthing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will bemouth
you will bemouth
he/she/it will bemouth
we will bemouth
you will bemouth
they will bemouth
Future continuous
I will be bemouthing
you will be bemouthing
he/she/it will be bemouthing
we will be bemouthing
you will be bemouthing
they will be bemouthing
Future perfect
I will have bemouthed
you will have bemouthed
he/she/it will have bemouthed
we will have bemouthed
you will have bemouthed
they will have bemouthed
Future perfect continuous
I will have been bemouthing
you will have been bemouthing
he/she/it will have been bemouthing
we will have been bemouthing
you will have been bemouthing
they will have been bemouthing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would bemouth
you would bemouth
he/she/it would bemouth
we would bemouth
you would bemouth
they would bemouth
Conditional continuous
I would be bemouthing
you would be bemouthing
he/she/it would be bemouthing
we would be bemouthing
you would be bemouthing
they would be bemouthing
Conditional perfect
I would have bemouth
you would have bemouth
he/she/it would have bemouth
we would have bemouth
you would have bemouth
they would have bemouth
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been bemouthing
you would have been bemouthing
he/she/it would have been bemouthing
we would have been bemouthing
you would have been bemouthing
they would have been bemouthing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you bemouth
we let´s bemouth
you bemouth
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
bemouthed
Present Participle
bemouthing
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 «BEMOUTH»
Discover the use of
bemouth in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
bemouth and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Supplementary English Glossary
They heard the illustrious furbelow'd Heroically iu Popean rhyme • Tee-to-tum'd,
in Miltonic blank bemouth'd. Southey, A'ondfscripts, i. BEMUD, to cover with mud,
and so to confuse. [This hath] so troubledly bemudded with gnefe and care ...
Thomas Lewis Owen Davies, James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps, 1881
2
The Dragon Nimbus Novels:
The smoke had induced visions of drowning and being eaten by a bemouth —
one of the monstrous fish that prowled the outer bay. The only predator large
enough and fierce enough to hunt a bemouth was a dragon. Just the memory of
those ...
The smoke had induced visions of drowning and being eaten by a bemouth —
one of the monstrous fish that prowled the outer bay. The only predator large
enough and fierce enough to hunt a bemouth was a dragon. Just the memory of
those ...
4
A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles: Founded ...
To mouth the praises of (a person) ; to talk grandiloquently, to declaim. a 1843
Southey Nondescr. i, They heard the illustrious furbelow'd Heroically in Popean
rhyme Tee-ti-tum'd, in Miltonic blank bemouth'd. x88s F. Harrison Crisis in Egypt
6 ...
Sir James Augustus Henry Murray, Philological Society (Great Britain), 1887
Trouble. with. Mrs. Bemouth. xhe next morning Barney left late for school. If he
could, manage to get there just before the bell rang, he might avoid Lenny. As he
hurried across the playground, he saw that everyone had gone inside already.
6
The Bookfinder: Annotations of books published 1983 through 1986
Miserable, he feels picked on by Russ too and by his new teacher, Mrs. Bemouth,
who one day embarrasses him by sending him out of the room to wash off the
face he's drawn on his hand. At recess, Lenny pushes Barney down the slide.
Sharon Spredemann Dreyer, 1989
7
The Poetical Works of Robert Southey
... Higher and longer with redoubling peals Rung, when they heard the illustrious
furbelow'd Heroically in Popean rhyme Tee-ti-tum'd, in Hiltonic blank bemouth'd ;
Prose, verse, Greek, Latin, English, rhyme and blank, Apotheosi-chancellor'd ...
8
Southey's Poetical Works
giied to the very Galleries Higher d applaud again, whose thunder-claps, M an
longer with redoubling peals "a. when they heard the illustrious furbelow'd g'gil-'
tum'd, in Mlltonlc blank bemouth'd; poll; ".“Y Geek. Latin, English, rhyme and
blank, ...
... without the latter too: And really till we fix on somebody For certain sure to
claimthem ashis due, Their author,like theNiger's mouth, willbother The worldto
sayifthere bemouth orauthor. LXXXII And who and what art thou?' the Archangel
said.
George Gordon, Lord Byron, 2013
10
The A B C of Bee Culture: A Cyclopaedia of Every Thing ...
Up, up, will soon crumble and break to pieces in the ' I went, until, on looking
down, I really bemouth, and will not make gum at all. In E gan to wonder what that
blue eyed baby and buying the ordinary cakes of wax of com- , her mamma
Would ...