CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO BEMUD
PRESENT
Present
I bemud
you bemud
he/she/it bemuds
we bemud
you bemud
they bemud
Present continuous
I am bemudding
you are bemudding
he/she/it is bemudding
we are bemudding
you are bemudding
they are bemudding
Present perfect
I have bemudded
you have bemudded
he/she/it has bemudded
we have bemudded
you have bemudded
they have bemudded
Present perfect continuous
I have been bemudding
you have been bemudding
he/she/it has been bemudding
we have been bemudding
you have been bemudding
they have been bemudding
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 bemudded
you bemudded
he/she/it bemudded
we bemudded
you bemudded
they bemudded
Past continuous
I was bemudding
you were bemudding
he/she/it was bemudding
we were bemudding
you were bemudding
they were bemudding
Past perfect
I had bemudded
you had bemudded
he/she/it had bemudded
we had bemudded
you had bemudded
they had bemudded
Past perfect continuous
I had been bemudding
you had been bemudding
he/she/it had been bemudding
we had been bemudding
you had been bemudding
they had been bemudding
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will bemud
you will bemud
he/she/it will bemud
we will bemud
you will bemud
they will bemud
Future continuous
I will be bemudding
you will be bemudding
he/she/it will be bemudding
we will be bemudding
you will be bemudding
they will be bemudding
Future perfect
I will have bemudded
you will have bemudded
he/she/it will have bemudded
we will have bemudded
you will have bemudded
they will have bemudded
Future perfect continuous
I will have been bemudding
you will have been bemudding
he/she/it will have been bemudding
we will have been bemudding
you will have been bemudding
they will have been bemudding
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would bemud
you would bemud
he/she/it would bemud
we would bemud
you would bemud
they would bemud
Conditional continuous
I would be bemudding
you would be bemudding
he/she/it would be bemudding
we would be bemudding
you would be bemudding
they would be bemudding
Conditional perfect
I would have bemud
you would have bemud
he/she/it would have bemud
we would have bemud
you would have bemud
they would have bemud
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been bemudding
you would have been bemudding
he/she/it would have been bemudding
we would have been bemudding
you would have been bemudding
they would have been bemudding
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you bemud
we let´s bemud
you bemud
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
bemudding
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 «BEMUD»
Discover the use of
bemud in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
bemud and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles: Founded ...
5 Elephants, .are wont, before they drink, to bemud the water. 1833 Eraser's Mag.
VI. 251 He often rides in swampy ways . . and bemuds his friends. 2. fig. To
confuse, muddle. X590 Nashe Lent. Stuffe (1871) 35 And so troubledly
bemudded ...
Sir James Augustus Henry Murray, Philological Society (Great Britain), 1887
2
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D)
Bemouth,bemowth′, v.i.todeclaim,to overpraise. Bemud, bemud′, v.t. to
bespatter with mud: to confuse. Bemuddle,bemud′l, v.t.toconfuse or muddle
completely. Bemuffle, bemuf′l, v.t.towrap or muffleup completely. Bemuse,
bemūz′, v.t. ...
3
The Scripture readers' journal
Bemud. L £116 Total to 1859 £2 1 1 Batho, Miss ..050 Batho.Mr.J.E. 1 0 0 Batho,
Mrs. . 0 10 0 Batho, Miss S. 0 2 6 Field, per Miss 0 13 6 TtaankoIFering 0 5 0
Thomas.Rev.J. 0 7 6 Thornton, Rev. C. . . 0 2 6 Thornton, Mrs. C. .
Church of England scripture readers' assoc, 1853
4
Worked elementary examples in geometrical drawing
... and Chatham is 30 miles, and measures on a map 18*3 inches. Draw the scale
of the map, divided into miles and furlongs. bemud. j. I. 1. Furlongs 80420 1 2 3
Miles A B 30 miles : 1 mile :: 18*3 in. : *61 of an inch to a mile. Take, therefore ...
John Hunter (of Uxbridge.), 1881
5
Hart's Annual Army List, Militia List, and Imperial Yeomanry ...
Bemud*. ] 99thDuJceof. Edinburgh'. ^(Lanarkshire)—. Linked. to6andJ3"SS25»
wrtiM. 345. CAPTAIN. DBEV.MAJ. UT.I.T.COL. p 30 Aug. 71 11 Mar. 72 p 16 Oct.
67 30 Apr. 73 11 Mar. 74 27 Juno 74 31 Oct. 77 6 Dec. 77 9 Dec. 77 2 July 79 ...
Bemud. ample. capital. Bat. »U. England is not, I am sorry to isy, a Belgravia or a
Tyburnia I so, u an impartial examiner, dealing with Great Britain as a whole, I
mutt ttke you with me into less ftvoured districts ; I mean the agricultural St. Giles's
...
7
Numbers: Their History and Meaning
Bemud. 235. GALILEI. Galileo 256, 257 GALOIS. Evariste 203 GAUSS, Carl
Friedrien 120, 203, 259, 265, 268, 270 GERBERT (Pope Sylvester II) 71, 153,
154, 157 GIRARD, Albert 203 GOLDBACH, Christian 128 GREGORY of Si.
Vincent 145 ...
o'[ 'isJi^q jad isciMit'i 'sain [id jad 188M0T 'Bemud 'pnvsnoqi jad }saMoi □
bBohiiio '[ajjwq jad ggaqgiH □as ii mn a '[aqfltiq jad maqS'H Sos^miO'
fiooiOCOOiOinocj.o'riONOSQXOcgoociooaoog^aaioiO Cft HHiO O; t- t- M"TM »
CO Oi aP t- i— ...
New Jersey. Bureau of Industrial Statistics, 1897
9
Report of the Annual Meeting
Bemud'? researches on this subject have been so thorough and complete that he
has left little to be learned. Yet there are many excellent physicians, who in their
daily practice profit by his discoveries, who know little of the steps by which ...
British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting, 1879
Thereafter Bemud died, and in July, 1881, his heirs sold the interest Inherited by
them in the Arm of Beraud & Gibert, including the Interest in the property in
question, to P. G. Gibert, the surviving partner, who then employed M. J. Voor-
hies, ...