CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO EXSERT
PRESENT
Present
I exsert
you exsert
he/she/it exserts
we exsert
you exsert
they exsert
Present continuous
I am exserting
you are exserting
he/she/it is exserting
we are exserting
you are exserting
they are exserting
Present perfect
I have exserted
you have exserted
he/she/it has exserted
we have exserted
you have exserted
they have exserted
Present perfect continuous
I have been exserting
you have been exserting
he/she/it has been exserting
we have been exserting
you have been exserting
they have been exserting
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 exserted
you exserted
he/she/it exserted
we exserted
you exserted
they exserted
Past continuous
I was exserting
you were exserting
he/she/it was exserting
we were exserting
you were exserting
they were exserting
Past perfect
I had exserted
you had exserted
he/she/it had exserted
we had exserted
you had exserted
they had exserted
Past perfect continuous
I had been exserting
you had been exserting
he/she/it had been exserting
we had been exserting
you had been exserting
they had been exserting
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will exsert
you will exsert
he/she/it will exsert
we will exsert
you will exsert
they will exsert
Future continuous
I will be exserting
you will be exserting
he/she/it will be exserting
we will be exserting
you will be exserting
they will be exserting
Future perfect
I will have exserted
you will have exserted
he/she/it will have exserted
we will have exserted
you will have exserted
they will have exserted
Future perfect continuous
I will have been exserting
you will have been exserting
he/she/it will have been exserting
we will have been exserting
you will have been exserting
they will have been exserting
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would exsert
you would exsert
he/she/it would exsert
we would exsert
you would exsert
they would exsert
Conditional continuous
I would be exserting
you would be exserting
he/she/it would be exserting
we would be exserting
you would be exserting
they would be exserting
Conditional perfect
I would have exsert
you would have exsert
he/she/it would have exsert
we would have exsert
you would have exsert
they would have exsert
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been exserting
you would have been exserting
he/she/it would have been exserting
we would have been exserting
you would have been exserting
they would have been exserting
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you exsert
we let´s exsert
you exsert
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
exserting
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 «EXSERT»
Discover the use of
exsert in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
exsert and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Flowering Plant Families of East Africa: An Introduction to ...
Valves exsert. Fruits 6-8 x 5-8 mm, valves just exsert or insert; pedicels 3-8 mm
long; peduncles 11-22 mm long; bark smooth and blue, rough and flaky at the
base only E. saligna 159. Fruits markedly purplish, 7 x 8 mm, stems with a bloom;
...
2
The Tourist's Flora: A Descriptive Catalogue of the ...
Lower Stalks more than half exsert. 118. Miehelii. Fertile Spikes 1-3, remote.
Bracts about equalling spikes. Fr. obovatc, attenuate, ending rather abruptly in a
linear, rough-edged beak, hardly nerved. p. 5. Woody hills, s. e. G. 119.
brericollia.
3
Corals from the Gulf of California and the North Pacific ...
(1) Primary septa wider and more exsert than remainder. A. (Asmmgia) dentata
Verrill (1]) All septa of equal width and evenly exsert. A. (Astumgia) caboensis n.
sp. Subgenus Astrangia s.s. Astrangia (Astrangia) browni Palmer Astrangia ...
4
Antarctic and Subantarctic Scleractinia
Ten primaries are the largest septa, highly exsert (1.5 mm above calicular edge),
and extending to columella. Ten secondaries are slightly exsert and extend two
thirds of distance to columella. Twenty tertiaries barely exsert and extending one
...
5
Flora of Tropical East Africa - Myrtaceae (2001)
Fibrous bark persistent over whole trunk; fruits turbinate, 6-7 x 5.5 mm, valves
exsert; pedicels (l-)3-5 mm long; peduncles 4-14 mm long 13. E. fastigata Fibrous
bark sometimes persistent on trunk for 2-8 m only and then smooth, white; fruits ...
6
Manual of British Botany: In which the Orders and Genera are ...
Corolla twice as long as the calyx ; the tube not exsert. Native of the south of
Europe. Cult. in gardens. Fl. light blue or whitish ; the bracts tipped with pink. July,
Aug. Perennial. Benth. 224. S. bracteata. (Bot. mag. 2320.) 4. ! S. pratensis. (L. sp
.
Daniel Chambers Macreight, 1837
7
Advances in Chinese Computer Science
Exsert and Fork In this section, we introduce the instructions exsert and fork.
Examples are given in Chinese, and the Chinese words are written in PINYIN,
with superscripts for tones. 4.1 Exsert It is well-known that noun phrases in
Chinese ...
8
North American Botany: Comprising the Native and Common ...
R. accri/olia, R. (W. 21-) petioles hirsute; leaves smooth, glaucous beneath,
acutely 5-lobed, unequally toothed — teeth mucronate; scape smooth: panicle
elongated, lax-flowered: petals short: stamens exsert. Kentucky, Maryland.
micrantha ...
Amos Eaton, John Wright (M. D.), 1840
9
Geological Survey Professional Paper
Septa of the first two cycles unequal but very exsert; third cycle septa not exsert;
fourth cycle incomplete, more exsert but narrower than those of third, probably
derived by substitution. Costae only faintly developed. Wall thin. Polyp pink when
...
10
Palaeontology Invertebrate
Septa numerous, strong, often exsert, the upper edges dentate. Dissepiments
abundant. Trias to Cretaceous; in England, Inferior Oolite to Corallian. Ex. M.
trochoides, Inferior and Great Oolite. Parasmilia. Simple, fixed, turbinate or
elongate.
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «EXSERT»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
exsert is used in the context of the following news items.
Official Super Monsters Ate My Condo! Launch Trailer
Share your thoughts Opening... Top comments. Top comments; Newest first. India Bertram 1 year ago. Im 47 exsert. Read more Show less. «YouTube, Sep 12»