CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO GORMANDISE
PRESENT
Present
I gormandise
you gormandise
he/she/it gormandises
we gormandise
you gormandise
they gormandise
Present continuous
I am gormandising
you are gormandising
he/she/it is gormandising
we are gormandising
you are gormandising
they are gormandising
Present perfect
I have gormandised
you have gormandised
he/she/it has gormandised
we have gormandised
you have gormandised
they have gormandised
Present perfect continuous
I have been gormandising
you have been gormandising
he/she/it has been gormandising
we have been gormandising
you have been gormandising
they have been gormandising
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 gormandised
you gormandised
he/she/it gormandised
we gormandised
you gormandised
they gormandised
Past continuous
I was gormandising
you were gormandising
he/she/it was gormandising
we were gormandising
you were gormandising
they were gormandising
Past perfect
I had gormandised
you had gormandised
he/she/it had gormandised
we had gormandised
you had gormandised
they had gormandised
Past perfect continuous
I had been gormandising
you had been gormandising
he/she/it had been gormandising
we had been gormandising
you had been gormandising
they had been gormandising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will gormandise
you will gormandise
he/she/it will gormandise
we will gormandise
you will gormandise
they will gormandise
Future continuous
I will be gormandising
you will be gormandising
he/she/it will be gormandising
we will be gormandising
you will be gormandising
they will be gormandising
Future perfect
I will have gormandised
you will have gormandised
he/she/it will have gormandised
we will have gormandised
you will have gormandised
they will have gormandised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been gormandising
you will have been gormandising
he/she/it will have been gormandising
we will have been gormandising
you will have been gormandising
they will have been gormandising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would gormandise
you would gormandise
he/she/it would gormandise
we would gormandise
you would gormandise
they would gormandise
Conditional continuous
I would be gormandising
you would be gormandising
he/she/it would be gormandising
we would be gormandising
you would be gormandising
they would be gormandising
Conditional perfect
I would have gormandise
you would have gormandise
he/she/it would have gormandise
we would have gormandise
you would have gormandise
they would have gormandise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been gormandising
you would have been gormandising
he/she/it would have been gormandising
we would have been gormandising
you would have been gormandising
they would have been gormandising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you gormandise
we let´s gormandise
you gormandise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
gormandised
Present Participle
gormandising
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 «GORMANDISE»
Discover the use of
gormandise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
gormandise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Simon & Schuster Super Crossword Puzzle Dictionary And ...
overeat, satiate, surfeit; 8 scarf out; 9 esophagus, overgorge; 10 gormandise,
gormandize, oesophagus; 11 gourmandize, ingurgitate, overindulge gorged: 5
sated; 7 stuffed; 9 surfeited; 12 ready to burst gorgeous: 4 rich; 8 splendid; ...
Seth Godin, Lark Productions LLC, Seth Godin Productions,
1999
The commonest is the formation of verbs from nouns, for example apprentice (
1631), barbecue (1661), gormandise (1548), gossip (1590), label (1601), launder
(1610), and spool 'wind on to a spool' (1603). In the case of gormandise and ...
Charles Laurence Barber,
1997
2. pungo, to pierce : pug pug-i-o, [the thing piercing], dagger. rebello, to make war
1 bebell rebell-i-o, [the one making again : - J war again], rebel. 3. heiuor, to
gormandise : hel hel-u-o, [the gormandising one], gormandiser. 4. cdio, to
cultivate ...
John Tahourdin White,
1858
U.tnar la sacristia, To guzzle, to gormandise. SAcno, cra, a. Holy, sacred. V.
Sagrado. Fuc^ go sacro, St. Anthony's fire, erysipelas. SackosAsto, ta, a. Sacred,
consecrated ; very holy. SACunfnA, sf The act of shaking off or rejecting any thing
.
Henry Neuman, Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti,
1831
5
Neuman and Baretti's Dictionary of the Spanish and English ...
Sacristan, sm. 1. Sacristan, sexton. 2. Hoop formerly worn by women. SacristAna,
sf. 1. Sacristan or sexton's wife. 2. Nun or lay woman who provides every thing
necessary for church service. Sackistaneak, va. (Joe.) To gormandise.
SacristaxIa ...
Henry Neuman, Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti,
1836
6
De Montfort: or, The old English nobleman
and gormandise : they lisped round oaths ! played single-stick in court-suits,
redolent ol essences, wore stays and swords, shared their time between the
chocolate-houses, the millinery and glove shops, the stables, the pit, the ring, and
the ...
De Montfort (fict.name.),
1842
Launcelot's "small trifle of wives" was, however, hardly compatible with the simple
line of life. There must have been too many crosses in such a destiny. " SCENE V
.—" Thou shall not gormandise.'' The word gormandise, which is equivalent to ...
William Shakespeare,
1853
To gormandise books is as wicked as to gormandise food. You have no more
right to be a literary epicure than to be a physical epicure. And if a man makes his
only aim in life scholarship, and lives merely for his own mental gratification, he is
...
9
A complete dictionary of the English language
OUTTATED, gftt'-ta-tfd. a. Besprinkled with drops, bedropped. GUTTER, gut'-tur. s
. A passage for water. To GUTTER, gut'-tur. v. a. To cut in small hollows. To
GUTTLE, gut'l. v. n. To feed luxuriously, to gormandise, A low word. To GUTTLE,
gut'l ...
10
Dictionary of the Spanish and English Language: Wherein the ...
Nun or lay woman who provides every thing necessary for church service.
SACRISTANEAK, m. (Joe.) To gormandise. SACRisTAfifA,*/. Office of a sexton ;
vestry. SACRISTIA, sf. 1. Sacristy, vestry ; a room ap- pendant to the church, in
which ...
Henry Neuman, Giuseppe Marco Antonio Barretti,
1832
5 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «GORMANDISE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
gormandise is used in the context of the following news items.
Bastille Week Celebrations
For the gormandise, felicitate this day in grandeur with special French delicacies such as Ratatouille, Coq au Vin, Lamb Bourguignon, ... «Free Press Journal, Jul 15»
Inside the world of people 'preparing for doomsday'
We love this shit: we love to wonder whether we'd have the steel balls of Katniss or Rick Grimes and we gormandise on movies, books, and TV ... «The Vine, Aug 14»
BBC GOOD FOOD SHOW SCOTLAND: A TASTE OF GLASGOW
Beyond the typical snacks and sodas on offer in this Scottish city, Glasgow will transform into a gormandise paradise this autumn as the BBC ... «Tourism Review, Sep 12»
Foods for the Lenten fast
You should not gormandise to the extent that your stomach becomes overloaded and you feel uncomfortable. The essence of fasting is ... «Jamaica Gleaner, Feb 12»
Lalin's Column: The Major who tried to control Muamar Gaddafi in …
He did not drink, smoke, gormandise or womanise. His preference was for living in a tent. He promoted himself from Captain to the rank only of ... «Asian Tribune, Feb 11»