CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO MATHEMATICISE
PRESENT
Present
I mathematicise
you mathematicise
he/she/it mathematicises
we mathematicise
you mathematicise
they mathematicise
Present continuous
I am mathematicising
you are mathematicising
he/she/it is mathematicising
we are mathematicising
you are mathematicising
they are mathematicising
Present perfect
I have mathematicised
you have mathematicised
he/she/it has mathematicised
we have mathematicised
you have mathematicised
they have mathematicised
Present perfect continuous
I have been mathematicising
you have been mathematicising
he/she/it has been mathematicising
we have been mathematicising
you have been mathematicising
they have been mathematicising
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 mathematicised
you mathematicised
he/she/it mathematicised
we mathematicised
you mathematicised
they mathematicised
Past continuous
I was mathematicising
you were mathematicising
he/she/it was mathematicising
we were mathematicising
you were mathematicising
they were mathematicising
Past perfect
I had mathematicised
you had mathematicised
he/she/it had mathematicised
we had mathematicised
you had mathematicised
they had mathematicised
Past perfect continuous
I had been mathematicising
you had been mathematicising
he/she/it had been mathematicising
we had been mathematicising
you had been mathematicising
they had been mathematicising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will mathematicise
you will mathematicise
he/she/it will mathematicise
we will mathematicise
you will mathematicise
they will mathematicise
Future continuous
I will be mathematicising
you will be mathematicising
he/she/it will be mathematicising
we will be mathematicising
you will be mathematicising
they will be mathematicising
Future perfect
I will have mathematicised
you will have mathematicised
he/she/it will have mathematicised
we will have mathematicised
you will have mathematicised
they will have mathematicised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been mathematicising
you will have been mathematicising
he/she/it will have been mathematicising
we will have been mathematicising
you will have been mathematicising
they will have been mathematicising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would mathematicise
you would mathematicise
he/she/it would mathematicise
we would mathematicise
you would mathematicise
they would mathematicise
Conditional continuous
I would be mathematicising
you would be mathematicising
he/she/it would be mathematicising
we would be mathematicising
you would be mathematicising
they would be mathematicising
Conditional perfect
I would have mathematicise
you would have mathematicise
he/she/it would have mathematicise
we would have mathematicise
you would have mathematicise
they would have mathematicise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been mathematicising
you would have been mathematicising
he/she/it would have been mathematicising
we would have been mathematicising
you would have been mathematicising
they would have been mathematicising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you mathematicise
we let´s mathematicise
you mathematicise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to mathematicise
Past participle
mathematicised
Present Participle
mathematicising
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 «MATHEMATICISE»
Discover the use of
mathematicise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
mathematicise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Nor any Prophet, meek or blatant, For true Religion hold a patent, Can
mathematicise the line Connecting Human and Divine, The line, say rather, that
doth reach From G01) to every soul and each,— Though Splurgeon's overhead
revealing ...
2
Indian English Through Newspapers
207. Fundas (from 'fundamentals; it has become a colloquialism by the process of
abbreviation/clipping). 208. Mathematicising Mathematicise The Subject '
Mathematics' is suffixed to make a verb out of it. often used by many 'under-13' "
The ...
3
The Shaping of Indian Science: 1982-2003
Sinha [69] in a bid to mathematicise natural disasters studies has proposed a
model of analogoues to well-known models of epidemiology. It is believed that
there would be interesting and perhaps far-reaching findings which may become
all ...
4
The Oxford Handbook of Aristotle
But there is obviously no reason to accept this, for Plato's idea was to
mathematicise these sciences in a way which cut them free from any connection
with perception.) I think that we may be sympathetic to what seems to be
Aristotle's main line ...
Christopher Shields, 2012
McCulloch and Pitt attempted to mathematicise the activity of neurons in the late
1950s (they were, in fact, mathematicians not brain physiologists). The following
is a comment by Steven Rose in The Conscious Brain (1976, pp. 357-8): '[they ...
6
The Economics of Feasible Socialism
In other words it is inconceivable to 'mathematicise' the complexities of current
operational production-and-supply planning and thereby secure a more efficient
operation of the centralised system. True, very interesting efforts have been made
...
7
Science at the Cross Roads: Papers from The Second ...
The attempts that have been made to mathematicise biology are extremely
characteristic, for their inadequacy, their inability to comprehend the multiplicity
and diversity of the subject, is at times clearly apparent, particularly in concrete
matters.
N. I. Bukharin et al., 2013
8
Phenomenology and Psychological Science: Historical and ...
This, he would contend, is unlikely to be grasped by those so enthusiastic to
mathematicise the world, and to practice reductionism in the face of experienced
reality. By this position he also side-steps the relevance of David Hume's (171 ...
Peter Ashworth, Man Cheung Chung, 2007
9
The Economics of Feasible Socialism Revisited
In other words it is inconceivable to 'mathematicise' the complexities of current
operational production-and-supply planning and thereby secure a more efficient
operation of the centralised system. True, very interesting efforts have been made
...
10
Descartes' Natural Philosophy
... a choice: either to pursue Beeckmanian qualitative corpuscular-mechanical
speculations about light and refraction, or to follow Kepler's attempt to identify
and mathematicise the causes of refraction as a step towards the discovery of the
law.
Stephen Gaukroger, John Schuster, John Sutton, 2003