CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO ETHICISE
PRESENT
Present
I ethicise
you ethicise
he/she/it ethicises
we ethicise
you ethicise
they ethicise
Present continuous
I am ethicising
you are ethicising
he/she/it is ethicising
we are ethicising
you are ethicising
they are ethicising
Present perfect
I have ethicised
you have ethicised
he/she/it has ethicised
we have ethicised
you have ethicised
they have ethicised
Present perfect continuous
I have been ethicising
you have been ethicising
he/she/it has been ethicising
we have been ethicising
you have been ethicising
they have been ethicising
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 ethicised
you ethicised
he/she/it ethicised
we ethicised
you ethicised
they ethicised
Past continuous
I was ethicising
you were ethicising
he/she/it was ethicising
we were ethicising
you were ethicising
they were ethicising
Past perfect
I had ethicised
you had ethicised
he/she/it had ethicised
we had ethicised
you had ethicised
they had ethicised
Past perfect continuous
I had been ethicising
you had been ethicising
he/she/it had been ethicising
we had been ethicising
you had been ethicising
they had been ethicising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will ethicise
you will ethicise
he/she/it will ethicise
we will ethicise
you will ethicise
they will ethicise
Future continuous
I will be ethicising
you will be ethicising
he/she/it will be ethicising
we will be ethicising
you will be ethicising
they will be ethicising
Future perfect
I will have ethicised
you will have ethicised
he/she/it will have ethicised
we will have ethicised
you will have ethicised
they will have ethicised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been ethicising
you will have been ethicising
he/she/it will have been ethicising
we will have been ethicising
you will have been ethicising
they will have been ethicising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would ethicise
you would ethicise
he/she/it would ethicise
we would ethicise
you would ethicise
they would ethicise
Conditional continuous
I would be ethicising
you would be ethicising
he/she/it would be ethicising
we would be ethicising
you would be ethicising
they would be ethicising
Conditional perfect
I would have ethicise
you would have ethicise
he/she/it would have ethicise
we would have ethicise
you would have ethicise
they would have ethicise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been ethicising
you would have been ethicising
he/she/it would have been ethicising
we would have been ethicising
you would have been ethicising
they would have been ethicising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you ethicise
we let´s ethicise
you ethicise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
ethicised
Present Participle
ethicising
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 «ETHICISE»
Discover the use of
ethicise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
ethicise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Rome, Reform and Reaction: Four Lectures on the Religious ...
True faith in an act like the cross, and in a person like Christ, must inevitably
ethicise itself. Its nature, because of its object, is a spiritual ethic, universal, nay
celestial, in its range, final and fundamental in its penetration of the soul. But it
can ...
Peter Taylor Forsyth, 1899
2
The Presbyterian Review
For one thing, it warns us what to expect from the similar effort of the Ritschlians
of to-day to ethicise theology ; for what better description of the Ritschlian attempt
could be desired than is supplied by Leibnitz's account of Toland, whose design
...
Charles Augustus Briggs, Archibald Alexander Hodge, Francis Landrey Patton, 1888
3
The London Quarterly Review
Not to dwell upon such ancient history as this, it is but a few months since a writer
, eminent in the literary if not the theological world, said that one of the tasks most
needed in the Christianity of to-day was to "ethicise eschatology." The phrase ...
William Lonsdale Watkinson, John Telford, William Theophilus Davison, 1896
Twelve years ago, Mr. W. S. Lilly wrote of it: "The newspaper press during the last
quarter of a century has done more than anything else to de-ethicise public life; to
lay the axe to the root of duty, self-devotion, self-sacrifice, the elements of the ...
Robert Fulton Cutting, 1912
5
The Twentieth Century Magazine
But it may, and it must, clarify and ethicise political thinking, and inspire to
political activity, despite the fact that it may not, as an organization, enter the field
of partisan strife. This restriction is not, however, for the old reasons of aloofness :
not ...
Benjamin Orange Flower, Charles Zueblin, 1912
6
The Philobiblion [ed. by G.P. Philes].
They prate, they legislate, they criticise, Chop logic, ethicise, philosophise, (Poor
reasoning dirt-pies !) While nine in ten, Among the mighty foolish men, Are the
sophisticated mighty wise." " Oman's patched spectre, — on his breast A Gaelic ...
Philobiblion, George Philip Philes, 1862
7
Social aspects of Christian morality
They have ceased to venerate truth : they care little for real facts, and their whole
tendency is to de-ethicise public life. If the American States are to take a front
place in guiding the future course of civilisation, they must make up their minds to
...
William Straton Bruce, 1905
8
Anselm's theory of the Atonement
1 Notwithstanding the suspicion of heresy attaching to it, the governmental theory
has had great weight down to our own day, although it has suffered considerable
modifications in form, in the endeavour to "ethicise the conception of ...
George Cadwalader Foley, 1908
9
Christian belief interpreted by Christian experience: ...
For one of Western birth, who attempts in the sensitised atmosphere of modern
India to give moral content to the Idea of God, to differentiate the Incarnation of
the Son of God from the incarnations of Hinduism and to ethicise religion in the ...
Charles Cuthbert Hall, 1905
10
Manual of Style for Use of Copy Editors, Proof Readers, ...
-sinker, -waisted. deerberry, grass, horn, hound, -neck, skin, stalker, stalking, de-
ethicise; the rest one word, delftware. deml-rilievo; the rest one word, dentate-
eiliate, -sinuate. desk work, d esse r t-spoon f ul . deutero-albumose, -elastose;
the ...
United States. Government Printing Office, 1908
3 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «ETHICISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
ethicise is used in the context of the following news items.
Is wearing fur morally worse than wearing leather?
The fur industry takes great delight in trying to out-ethicise faux fur on this basis. But faux fur doesn't require the caging, farming or slaughter of ... «The Guardian, Feb 15»
...Party Chieftain Flays Dokubo Asari for Attacking Former Head of …
... from “the antics of the likes of Dokubo-Asari who wants to ethicise and sectionalise the Nigerian presidency for parochial and selfish reasons. «THISDAY Live, Jul 14»
TNA fans hold peaceful demonstration in Kisumu
He said Kenyans must de-ethicise politics of tribal blocs if the country is to attain much hyped national unity as embodied in the National ... «The Standard Digital News, May 12»