CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO ENWALLOW
PRESENT
Present
I enwallow
you enwallow
he/she/it enwallows
we enwallow
you enwallow
they enwallow
Present continuous
I am enwallowing
you are enwallowing
he/she/it is enwallowing
we are enwallowing
you are enwallowing
they are enwallowing
Present perfect
I have enwallowed
you have enwallowed
he/she/it has enwallowed
we have enwallowed
you have enwallowed
they have enwallowed
Present perfect continuous
I have been enwallowing
you have been enwallowing
he/she/it has been enwallowing
we have been enwallowing
you have been enwallowing
they have been enwallowing
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 enwallowed
you enwallowed
he/she/it enwallowed
we enwallowed
you enwallowed
they enwallowed
Past continuous
I was enwallowing
you were enwallowing
he/she/it was enwallowing
we were enwallowing
you were enwallowing
they were enwallowing
Past perfect
I had enwallowed
you had enwallowed
he/she/it had enwallowed
we had enwallowed
you had enwallowed
they had enwallowed
Past perfect continuous
I had been enwallowing
you had been enwallowing
he/she/it had been enwallowing
we had been enwallowing
you had been enwallowing
they had been enwallowing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will enwallow
you will enwallow
he/she/it will enwallow
we will enwallow
you will enwallow
they will enwallow
Future continuous
I will be enwallowing
you will be enwallowing
he/she/it will be enwallowing
we will be enwallowing
you will be enwallowing
they will be enwallowing
Future perfect
I will have enwallowed
you will have enwallowed
he/she/it will have enwallowed
we will have enwallowed
you will have enwallowed
they will have enwallowed
Future perfect continuous
I will have been enwallowing
you will have been enwallowing
he/she/it will have been enwallowing
we will have been enwallowing
you will have been enwallowing
they will have been enwallowing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would enwallow
you would enwallow
he/she/it would enwallow
we would enwallow
you would enwallow
they would enwallow
Conditional continuous
I would be enwallowing
you would be enwallowing
he/she/it would be enwallowing
we would be enwallowing
you would be enwallowing
they would be enwallowing
Conditional perfect
I would have enwallow
you would have enwallow
he/she/it would have enwallow
we would have enwallow
you would have enwallow
they would have enwallow
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been enwallowing
you would have been enwallowing
he/she/it would have been enwallowing
we would have been enwallowing
you would have been enwallowing
they would have been enwallowing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you enwallow
we let´s enwallow
you enwallow
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
enwallowed
Present Participle
enwallowing
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 «ENWALLOW»
Discover the use of
enwallow in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
enwallow and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Complete Works in Verse and Prose: Faerie queene ...
... three one fencelesfe lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne blacke bloudy
gore, And byting th'earth for very deaths disdaine ; Who with a cloud of night him
couering, bore 130 Downe to the houfe of dole, his daies there to deplore.
2
The Faerie Queene: Book V, The Legend of Artegall Or of Justice
So now all three one sencelesse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne blacke
bloudy gore, And byting th'earth for very deaths disdaine ; Who with a cloud of
night him covering, bore Downe to the house of dole, his daies there to deplore.
Edmund Spenser, Alfred Bradly Gough, 1918
3
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
So now all three one sencelesse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne hlacke
bloudy gore, And byting th' earth for very deaths disdaine; Who with a cloud of
night him covering bore Duwne to the house of dole, his daies there to deplore.
xv.
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
4
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser
... him strooke attonce, 14 That all the three attonce fell on the Plaine, Else should
he thrise have needed for the nonce Them to have stricken, and thrise to have
slaine. So now all three one sencelesse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne
...
5
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser. With mem. and critical ...
... all the three at once fell on the plain, 1Occasion. Else should he thrice have
needed for the nonce1 Them to have stricken, and thrice to have slain. So now all
three one senseless lump remain, Enwallow'd in his own black bloody gore, And
...
6
Faerie queene. book III-V
So now all three one sencelesse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne blacke
bloudy gore, And byting th' earth for very deaths disdaine ; Who, with a cloud of
night him covering, bore Downe to the House of Dole,2 his daies there to deplore
...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1842
7
The works of Edmund Spenser, ed. by J.P. Collier
So now all three one sencelesse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne blacke
bloudy gore, And byting th' earth for very deaths disdaine ; Who, with a cloud of
night him covering, bore Downe to the house of dole, his daies there to deplore.
Edmund Spenser, John Payne Collier, 1862
8
Library edition of the British poets
... the three at once fell on the plain, Else should he thrice have needed for the
nonce1 Them to have stricken, and thrice to have slain. So now all three one
senseless lump remain, Enwallow'd in his own black bloody gore, And biting th'
earth ...
George Gilfillan, William Shakespeare, 1862
9
The craft sinister: a diplomatico-political history of the ...
With this restraint gone, the German emperor began to enwallow his people,
entirely by utterances that were indiscreet and injudicious, in a slough of
international complications that led from one crisis to another. Czar Nicholas had
taken over ...
George Abel Schreiner, 1920
10
Complete Works of Edmund Spenser
So now all three one sencelcsse lumpe remaine, Enwallow'd in his owne blacke
hloudy gore, And by ting til' earth for very deaths disdaine ; Who, with a cloud of
night him covering, bore Downe to the house of dole, his daies there to deplore.
Edmund Spenser, Richard Morris, John Wesley Hales, 1897