CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO EUPHONISE
PRESENT
Present
I euphonise
you euphonise
he/she/it euphonises
we euphonise
you euphonise
they euphonise
Present continuous
I am euphonising
you are euphonising
he/she/it is euphonising
we are euphonising
you are euphonising
they are euphonising
Present perfect
I have euphonised
you have euphonised
he/she/it has euphonised
we have euphonised
you have euphonised
they have euphonised
Present perfect continuous
I have been euphonising
you have been euphonising
he/she/it has been euphonising
we have been euphonising
you have been euphonising
they have been euphonising
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 euphonised
you euphonised
he/she/it euphonised
we euphonised
you euphonised
they euphonised
Past continuous
I was euphonising
you were euphonising
he/she/it was euphonising
we were euphonising
you were euphonising
they were euphonising
Past perfect
I had euphonised
you had euphonised
he/she/it had euphonised
we had euphonised
you had euphonised
they had euphonised
Past perfect continuous
I had been euphonising
you had been euphonising
he/she/it had been euphonising
we had been euphonising
you had been euphonising
they had been euphonising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will euphonise
you will euphonise
he/she/it will euphonise
we will euphonise
you will euphonise
they will euphonise
Future continuous
I will be euphonising
you will be euphonising
he/she/it will be euphonising
we will be euphonising
you will be euphonising
they will be euphonising
Future perfect
I will have euphonised
you will have euphonised
he/she/it will have euphonised
we will have euphonised
you will have euphonised
they will have euphonised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been euphonising
you will have been euphonising
he/she/it will have been euphonising
we will have been euphonising
you will have been euphonising
they will have been euphonising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would euphonise
you would euphonise
he/she/it would euphonise
we would euphonise
you would euphonise
they would euphonise
Conditional continuous
I would be euphonising
you would be euphonising
he/she/it would be euphonising
we would be euphonising
you would be euphonising
they would be euphonising
Conditional perfect
I would have euphonise
you would have euphonise
he/she/it would have euphonise
we would have euphonise
you would have euphonise
they would have euphonise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been euphonising
you would have been euphonising
he/she/it would have been euphonising
we would have been euphonising
you would have been euphonising
they would have been euphonising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you euphonise
we let´s euphonise
you euphonise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
euphonised
Present Participle
euphonising
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 «EUPHONISE»
Discover the use of
euphonise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
euphonise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Celtic Origin of a Great Part of the Greek and Latin ...
12 3 4 5 c Grampii montes, Gra, from garbh, m, euphonise gratia before p, 3 pii,
from beann, a hill, 4 mon, from monadh, t, euphonise gratia after n, G es, a plural
termination not derived from the Gaelic. Gratise : Gradh, love, affection. Glaneus:
...
2
Dictionarium Scoto-Celticum: A Dictionary of the Gaelic ...
Between the article and substantive nouns singular of the masculine gender, and
in the nominative or objective case, beginning with a vowel : litera T, euphonise
causa, statim post articulum, et ante nomen generis masculini, et casus ...
3
Life and Letters of F. W. Robertson
Else Talleyrand's hideous sneer might be almost believed : ' the happy are they
who have hard hearts, and hard ' — how shall I euphonise it ? — ' peptic powers.'
XLVII. I rather agree with the view of St. Paul having taken, personally, ...
Stopford Augustus Brooke, Frederick William Robertson, 1866
4
An Exposition of Vulgar and Common Errors Adapted to the ...
... the hissing sound thereof doth not so far make it unpleasant to the ear as to
require it to be avoided euphonise gratia. Besides this confusion in the pronouns,
another error doth very commonly find place in conversation and periodical ...
Caroline Frances Cornwallis, 1846
I suppose Gray altered the name "euphonise gratia; " as I can nowhere find a
bard mentioned of the name of " Modred.' V. 30. " Uttering such dulcet and
harmonious breath, That the rude sea grew civil at her song." Mids. N. Dream, act
ii. so. 2.
... omitting the liquid, and retaining the inserted consonant. I found that the phasis
of this consonant varied (apparently euphonise gratia) with the liquid ; and
sometimes it appeared as ft (in ftpobov), as 7 (in 7X070?, lac), as o (in Bvo(pepo9
).
7
The Poetical Works of Thomas Gray
See a poem of his called the "Orchard" in Jones, Relies, vol. i. p. 24. I suppose
Gray altered the name "euphonise gratia;" as I can nowhere find a bard
mentioned of the name of "Modred." Page 170. On dreary Arson's shore they lie.
The shores ...
Thomas Gray, Henry Reed, 1853
8
Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country
The ornate style of Occleve and Hawes was more excusable, because it was
intended to enrich and euphonise the language in an earlier and ruder stage,
and because, however much it might displease the taste of a judicious reader, it
did not ...
9
Life and letters of Frederick W. Robertson, ed. by S.A. ...
Else Talleyrand's hideous sneer might be almost believed : ' the happy are they
who have hard hearts, and hard ' — how shall I euphonise it ? — ' peptic powers.'
XLVII. I rather agree with the view of St. Paul having taken, personally, a low ...
Frederick William Robertson, Stopford Augustus Brooke, 1873
Magalh : Sax. mag's, et mag'Sa, unde liquescente g secundum Gramm. primi
Capitis R. G, mautha, vel maurtha, r finalis, ut in aliis vocibus, euphonise gratia
accedente. 1 Tract 8 ; Of Languages. 1 Ingulph. Hist. p. 26. s By ' Cimbric ' Hickes
...
Walter William Skeat, 1873
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «EUPHONISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
euphonise is used in the context of the following news items.
Way before Breakfast Network and Independent, there was Sintercom
You can euphonise it anyway you like, example, “light touch”, but the reality is that its effect is that of a Damocles Sword. What's “light” about ... «The Independent Singapore News, Dec 13»