CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO HOCUSSED
PRESENT
Present
I hocussed
you hocussed
he/she/it hocusseds
we hocussed
you hocussed
they hocussed
Present continuous
I am hocusseding
you are hocusseding
he/she/it is hocusseding
we are hocusseding
you are hocusseding
they are hocusseding
Present perfect
I have hocusseded
you have hocusseded
he/she/it has hocusseded
we have hocusseded
you have hocusseded
they have hocusseded
Present perfect continuous
I have been hocusseding
you have been hocusseding
he/she/it has been hocusseding
we have been hocusseding
you have been hocusseding
they have been hocusseding
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 hocusseded
you hocusseded
he/she/it hocusseded
we hocusseded
you hocusseded
they hocusseded
Past continuous
I was hocusseding
you were hocusseding
he/she/it was hocusseding
we were hocusseding
you were hocusseding
they were hocusseding
Past perfect
I had hocusseded
you had hocusseded
he/she/it had hocusseded
we had hocusseded
you had hocusseded
they had hocusseded
Past perfect continuous
I had been hocusseding
you had been hocusseding
he/she/it had been hocusseding
we had been hocusseding
you had been hocusseding
they had been hocusseding
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will hocussed
you will hocussed
he/she/it will hocussed
we will hocussed
you will hocussed
they will hocussed
Future continuous
I will be hocusseding
you will be hocusseding
he/she/it will be hocusseding
we will be hocusseding
you will be hocusseding
they will be hocusseding
Future perfect
I will have hocusseded
you will have hocusseded
he/she/it will have hocusseded
we will have hocusseded
you will have hocusseded
they will have hocusseded
Future perfect continuous
I will have been hocusseding
you will have been hocusseding
he/she/it will have been hocusseding
we will have been hocusseding
you will have been hocusseding
they will have been hocusseding
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would hocussed
you would hocussed
he/she/it would hocussed
we would hocussed
you would hocussed
they would hocussed
Conditional continuous
I would be hocusseding
you would be hocusseding
he/she/it would be hocusseding
we would be hocusseding
you would be hocusseding
they would be hocusseding
Conditional perfect
I would have hocussed
you would have hocussed
he/she/it would have hocussed
we would have hocussed
you would have hocussed
they would have hocussed
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been hocusseding
you would have been hocusseding
he/she/it would have been hocusseding
we would have been hocusseding
you would have been hocusseding
they would have been hocusseding
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you hocussed
we let´s hocussed
you hocussed
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
hocusseded
Present Participle
hocusseding
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 «HOCUSSED»
Discover the use of
hocussed in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hocussed and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Eventful Nights of August 20th and 21st, 1854, and how ...
Ferdinand Cartwright EWER, John Worth EDMONDS. small pearl cross, and
several other little matters of orna~ meat. I was struck by the suddenness with
which the light ceased to waver as I directed my attention to it. l started up, but ...
Ferdinand Cartwright EWER, John Worth EDMONDS, 1855
When the policeman appeared, Hunt began to sway and pull at the door,
confined by its chain : and he frantically reiterated his charge, that he had been
robbed and hocussed in that house, that night, by Mrs. Brandon. The policeman,
by a ...
Frederick Lewis Allen, 1862
3
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
When the policeman appeared, Hunt began to sway and pull at the door,
confined by its chain: and he frantically reiterated his charge, that he had been
robbed and hocussed in that house, that night, by Mrs. Brandon. The policeman,
by a ...
4
The Adventures of Philip
When the policeman appeared, Hunt began to sway and pull at the door,
confined by its chain : and he frantically reiterated his charge, that he had been
robbed and hocussed in that house, that night, by Mrs. Brandon. The policeman,
by a ...
William Makepeace Thackeray, 2009
5
Delphi Complete Works of John Buchan (Illustrated)
Mr Hawthorn came back to consciousness with an intolerable headache anda
raging thirst;hewas given a drink, which must have been hocussed, forhe lost his
sensesagain. The body ofthe pedlar was secretly buried, a ceremonyfor which
the ...
Run on the two best horses in your honour's stable, and the rest of the horses
hocussed. sir rufus. Hocussed? My horses hocussed ! jaikes. Some horse-
coper's trick, sir. They're incapable. ranacre. Can I believe my ears ? sir rufus.
About my ...
7
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
... you to keep the Vid- dy's eyes hocussed all that time V " Nothing so easy. The
contract is to be signed to-day, if the fright of last night don't interrupt it. By the by,
who was the domino that brought her home ?" "A real gentleman, I'll be sworn, ...
Well, he took no heed, and his steed was " hocussed," and that, too, on the very
morning he was matched against Ralph for £500, at the ensuing Houghton
Meeting ! So apparently prepared were the parties interested, for some such ...
... of the Canada SS Tadoussac, which left Ha Ha Bay behind us and soon
passed us, echoed and-re-echoed from the cliffs of the mountains along the deep
blue fjord like the laughter of the Kaatskill goblins who hocussed old Rip Van
Winkle.
10
Ten thousand a-year [by S. Warren].
The latter had, indeed, only seventeen more in reserve, independently of the
Quaint Club, and the still neutral twenty accessibles ; while Delamere had yet,
provided his promises stood firm, and none of his men were hocussed or
kidnapped, ...