ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD GRANGERIZE
Named after Joseph Granger, 18th-century English writer, whose Biographical History of England (1769) included blank pages for illustrations to be supplied by the reader.
CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO GRANGERIZE
PRESENT
Present
I grangerize
you grangerize
he/she/it grangerizes
we grangerize
you grangerize
they grangerize
Present continuous
I am grangerizing
you are grangerizing
he/she/it is grangerizing
we are grangerizing
you are grangerizing
they are grangerizing
Present perfect
I have grangerized
you have grangerized
he/she/it has grangerized
we have grangerized
you have grangerized
they have grangerized
Present perfect continuous
I have been grangerizing
you have been grangerizing
he/she/it has been grangerizing
we have been grangerizing
you have been grangerizing
they have been grangerizing
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 grangerized
you grangerized
he/she/it grangerized
we grangerized
you grangerized
they grangerized
Past continuous
I was grangerizing
you were grangerizing
he/she/it was grangerizing
we were grangerizing
you were grangerizing
they were grangerizing
Past perfect
I had grangerized
you had grangerized
he/she/it had grangerized
we had grangerized
you had grangerized
they had grangerized
Past perfect continuous
I had been grangerizing
you had been grangerizing
he/she/it had been grangerizing
we had been grangerizing
you had been grangerizing
they had been grangerizing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will grangerize
you will grangerize
he/she/it will grangerize
we will grangerize
you will grangerize
they will grangerize
Future continuous
I will be grangerizing
you will be grangerizing
he/she/it will be grangerizing
we will be grangerizing
you will be grangerizing
they will be grangerizing
Future perfect
I will have grangerized
you will have grangerized
he/she/it will have grangerized
we will have grangerized
you will have grangerized
they will have grangerized
Future perfect continuous
I will have been grangerizing
you will have been grangerizing
he/she/it will have been grangerizing
we will have been grangerizing
you will have been grangerizing
they will have been grangerizing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would grangerize
you would grangerize
he/she/it would grangerize
we would grangerize
you would grangerize
they would grangerize
Conditional continuous
I would be grangerizing
you would be grangerizing
he/she/it would be grangerizing
we would be grangerizing
you would be grangerizing
they would be grangerizing
Conditional perfect
I would have grangerize
you would have grangerize
he/she/it would have grangerize
we would have grangerize
you would have grangerize
they would have grangerize
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been grangerizing
you would have been grangerizing
he/she/it would have been grangerizing
we would have been grangerizing
you would have been grangerizing
they would have been grangerizing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you grangerize
we let´s grangerize
you grangerize
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
grangerized
Present Participle
grangerizing
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 «GRANGERIZE»
Discover the use of
grangerize in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
grangerize and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory
Grangerize earlier and more adventurous ones was Fynes Morison, who
published his Itinerary of travels in 1617. During the 17th c. increasing numbers
of Englishmen explored Europe, including John Evelyn and Milton. By 1700 the
Grand ...
2
Wordsworth Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
Grain. Grangerize. which the poet expressed his " strong feeling as to the Reality
of the Unseen," is taken from Malory. Grain. A knave in grain. A thoroughgoing
knave, a knave all through. An old phrase which comes from dyeing. The brilliant
...
Ebenezer Cobham Brewer, 2001
3
A New Dictionary of Eponyms
GRANGERIZE The words grangerize (to add illustrations to a book) and
grangerism (the practice of the same) are eponymous from the name of an
English vicar who, in 1769, published a six-volume tome titled Biographical
History of England ...
4
The ... Volume of the Walpole Society
Hence Grangerism, the practice of grangerizing. Officially defined in 1882, the
verb 'to Grangerize' passed into the English language, laden with negative
implications, after nineteenth-century commentators had consistently vilified extra
- ...
5
Melba toast, Bowie's knife & Caesar's wife: a dictionary of ...
GRAAFIAN FOLLICLE /GRANGERIZE 89 Graafian follicle A Graafian follicle is
one of the small liquid-filled sacs in the ovary of a mammal that contains the
developing egg. The name Graafian follicle honors their discoverer, the Dutch ...
6
A noble art: amateur artists and drawing masters, c.1600-1800
or grangerize published and unpublished accounts. The term 'grangerize' is
named alter the Revd James Granger (1723-76) who interleaved his own
unillustrated book, Biographical History of England ... (1769), with 14,0oo
engraved ...
Kim Sloan, British Museum. Trustees, 2000
7
The Anatomy of Bibliomania
Lest any fastidious or cynical critic accuse him of gross exaggeration or
ignorance in this receipt, he says that a late distinguished and highly respectable
female collector, who began to grangerize the Bible, procured no fewer than
seven ...
8
Textual Studies and the Enlarged Eighteenth Century: ...
No longer need this require a razor; we have only to persuade some key
repositories to cut loose their collections of public~domain images and all can
Grangerize to their heart's content.23 One imagines, for instance, new digital
editions of ...
Kevin L. Cope, Robert C. Leitz III, 2012
9
Pop Goes the Church: Should the Church Engage Pop Culture?
We Grangerize it. That is, we make it work for our culture, and that is okay with us.
We truly do not care whether what we do is original or not—we just care if it works
. If it is effective, who cares whether we got the idea from a church in Dothan or ...
10
Walker's Rhyming Dictionary of the English Language
ORAH'OEREZE] fBOHZl Grangerize v.t. To extra-illustrate with inserted prints, etc.
E'therize v.t. To put under the Influence of ether. Bow'dlerlze v.t. To expurgate.
Euhe'merize v.t. To explain myths rationalistic* ally. Mes'merize v.t. To bring into ...
John Walker, Lawrence H. Dawson, Michael B. Freeman, 1983