CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO ENTOIL
PRESENT
Present
I entoil
you entoil
he/she/it entoils
we entoil
you entoil
they entoil
Present continuous
I am entoiling
you are entoiling
he/she/it is entoiling
we are entoiling
you are entoiling
they are entoiling
Present perfect
I have entoiled
you have entoiled
he/she/it has entoiled
we have entoiled
you have entoiled
they have entoiled
Present perfect continuous
I have been entoiling
you have been entoiling
he/she/it has been entoiling
we have been entoiling
you have been entoiling
they have been entoiling
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 entoiled
you entoiled
he/she/it entoiled
we entoiled
you entoiled
they entoiled
Past continuous
I was entoiling
you were entoiling
he/she/it was entoiling
we were entoiling
you were entoiling
they were entoiling
Past perfect
I had entoiled
you had entoiled
he/she/it had entoiled
we had entoiled
you had entoiled
they had entoiled
Past perfect continuous
I had been entoiling
you had been entoiling
he/she/it had been entoiling
we had been entoiling
you had been entoiling
they had been entoiling
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will entoil
you will entoil
he/she/it will entoil
we will entoil
you will entoil
they will entoil
Future continuous
I will be entoiling
you will be entoiling
he/she/it will be entoiling
we will be entoiling
you will be entoiling
they will be entoiling
Future perfect
I will have entoiled
you will have entoiled
he/she/it will have entoiled
we will have entoiled
you will have entoiled
they will have entoiled
Future perfect continuous
I will have been entoiling
you will have been entoiling
he/she/it will have been entoiling
we will have been entoiling
you will have been entoiling
they will have been entoiling
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would entoil
you would entoil
he/she/it would entoil
we would entoil
you would entoil
they would entoil
Conditional continuous
I would be entoiling
you would be entoiling
he/she/it would be entoiling
we would be entoiling
you would be entoiling
they would be entoiling
Conditional perfect
I would have entoil
you would have entoil
he/she/it would have entoil
we would have entoil
you would have entoil
they would have entoil
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been entoiling
you would have been entoiling
he/she/it would have been entoiling
we would have been entoiling
you would have been entoiling
they would have been entoiling
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you entoil
we let´s entoil
you entoil
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
entoiling
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 «ENTOIL»
Discover the use of
entoil in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
entoil and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
PtlJUtra. &t. Entoil**. SYMBOLISM OF MARTYRDOM, OF PEACEFUL PURSUIT
AND A BURNING WORLD. &ONDROUS is the architecture of the smoke,
whether God with His finger curls it into a cloud, or rounds it into a dome, or
points it in a ...
Thomas De Witt Talmage,
1894
2
Sabina; a Sicilian tale of the thirteenth century
All ills with which his life thou dost entoil, With tenfold vengeance shall on thee
recoil : For Fate 'twixt him and thee has spun a thread, Which broken, leaves thy
future all to dread.” The effect produced on the mind of the superstitious Charles
by ...
John Brampton PHILPOT,
1854
3
A New and Improved Standard French and English and English ...
ENTITY. en'tite, t. gtre, m. entity,/. ENTOIL entoil', va. enlacer, attraper. ENTOMB
entOm', va. ensevelir, enterrer. ENTOMOLOGY entomol'oje, «. traitE des ia-
scctes, m. entomologie, /. ENTOZOA entozo'a, «. [ent.] entozoaires, vers uili.-
tiimux, m.
Alexander G. Collot,
1856
4
The Chambers Crossword Dictionary, 3rd edition
... servitude, vassalage 10oppression, repression, subjection11 enthralment,
subjugation ensnare ◊containmentindicator 03 net 04 hook, lime, trap 05 benet,
catch, snare, snarl 06 enmesh, entoil, entrap, trepan 07 capture, embroil 08
entangle ...
5
Of Pavlova, Poetry and Paradigms: Essays in Honour of Harry ...
'Entoil'd in woofed phantasies': some threads of word-spinning and tale-weaving
Robert Easting The title of the recent biography of the Oxford lexicographer
James A. H. Murray has him Caught in the Web of Words, just as, in the
preparation ...
Christine Franzen, Laurie Bauer,
1993
6
The Complete Wordbook for Game Players: Winning Words for ...
... PARKA HOCKEY TICKET DID GET EXPENSIVE 74 UNITER 75 SOILED 76
STEREO 77 LINERS 78 ENTOIL 79 DETAIN 80 GARNET 81 OIL-SAT 82 TINIER
83 ATE-SOO 84 SNORED 85 STEROL 86 INMATE 87 NEATER GRABBED
MORE ...
Entoil'd at times with meshes hard to undo : Which God inspire the mouse to
nibble through ! His rhymes the poet flings at all men's feet, And whoso will may
trample on his rhymes. Should Time let die a song that's true and sweet The
singer's ...
Jeannette Leonard Gilder, Joseph Benson Gilder,
1892
PUFF BUDS 81 ENTOIL A CHAP GUARDS A VW 82 GARNET WONDROUSLY
PUFFY MINERAL 83 EASING BOOK ON COMFORT: GULP OUZO 84 OIL-SAT
NEXT BUG CRAMP 85 TINIER MAN CHANGED A VW FLAT 86 ATE-SOD RIN
TIN ...
9
The Universal Songster, Or Museum of Mirth: Forming the Most ...
Riches serve but to entoil her, Like the bee with honey stored ', Her wealth allures
the cruel spoiler, And doorns her victim of her hoard. v¢aaooor GIVE ME, MY
BOY, A IOLLY SONG, THAT ENDS WITH. 'l'0L DE IIOL LOL. (cont) THE ills of life
...
10
Letters of the Rev. Dr. Beecher and Rev. Mr. Nettleton, on ...
... or, what he would like still better, by such base motives to entoil and enlist him
in his service, by compelling him to adopt his own measures. So did not Paul. His
two epistles to the Corinthians contain little else than an humbling disclosure of ...
Lyman Beecher, Novanglus (pseud.),
1828