CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO METAGROBOLISE
PRESENT
Present
I metagrobolise
you metagrobolise
he/she/it metagrobolises
we metagrobolise
you metagrobolise
they metagrobolise
Present continuous
I am metagrobolising
you are metagrobolising
he/she/it is metagrobolising
we are metagrobolising
you are metagrobolising
they are metagrobolising
Present perfect
I have metagrobolised
you have metagrobolised
he/she/it has metagrobolised
we have metagrobolised
you have metagrobolised
they have metagrobolised
Present perfect continuous
I have been metagrobolising
you have been metagrobolising
he/she/it has been metagrobolising
we have been metagrobolising
you have been metagrobolising
they have been metagrobolising
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 metagrobolised
you metagrobolised
he/she/it metagrobolised
we metagrobolised
you metagrobolised
they metagrobolised
Past continuous
I was metagrobolising
you were metagrobolising
he/she/it was metagrobolising
we were metagrobolising
you were metagrobolising
they were metagrobolising
Past perfect
I had metagrobolised
you had metagrobolised
he/she/it had metagrobolised
we had metagrobolised
you had metagrobolised
they had metagrobolised
Past perfect continuous
I had been metagrobolising
you had been metagrobolising
he/she/it had been metagrobolising
we had been metagrobolising
you had been metagrobolising
they had been metagrobolising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will metagrobolise
you will metagrobolise
he/she/it will metagrobolise
we will metagrobolise
you will metagrobolise
they will metagrobolise
Future continuous
I will be metagrobolising
you will be metagrobolising
he/she/it will be metagrobolising
we will be metagrobolising
you will be metagrobolising
they will be metagrobolising
Future perfect
I will have metagrobolised
you will have metagrobolised
he/she/it will have metagrobolised
we will have metagrobolised
you will have metagrobolised
they will have metagrobolised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been metagrobolising
you will have been metagrobolising
he/she/it will have been metagrobolising
we will have been metagrobolising
you will have been metagrobolising
they will have been metagrobolising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would metagrobolise
you would metagrobolise
he/she/it would metagrobolise
we would metagrobolise
you would metagrobolise
they would metagrobolise
Conditional continuous
I would be metagrobolising
you would be metagrobolising
he/she/it would be metagrobolising
we would be metagrobolising
you would be metagrobolising
they would be metagrobolising
Conditional perfect
I would have metagrobolise
you would have metagrobolise
he/she/it would have metagrobolise
we would have metagrobolise
you would have metagrobolise
they would have metagrobolise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been metagrobolising
you would have been metagrobolising
he/she/it would have been metagrobolising
we would have been metagrobolising
you would have been metagrobolising
they would have been metagrobolising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you metagrobolise
we let´s metagrobolise
you metagrobolise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to metagrobolise
Past participle
metagrobolised
Present Participle
metagrobolising
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 «METAGROBOLISE»
Discover the use of
metagrobolise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
metagrobolise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Twice-Told Children's Tales: The Influence of Childhood ...
(As Nora Crook has pointed out, Kipling "borrowed the Rabelaisian coinage '
metagrobolise'" to describe his own characteristic practice of creating "a work of
art out of the con- cealed metamorphosis of another" [xv].) Despite its archly
childlike ...
CONTRARIOUS VALUES The value system in bureaucracy is bifarious: inherent
values and survivaloriented values. The two facets of the same value system
further metagrobolise the complexity of the value system of the bureaucracy ab
intra ...
3
Policing the Police 2 Edition
CONTRARIOUS VALUES The value system in bureaucracy is bifarious: inherent
values and survival-oriented values. The two facets of the same value system
further metagrobolise the complexity of the value system of the bureaucracy ab ...
4
Mr. Punch and the police
... little mind is split But we must make the best of it; Subliminal desire for pork Is
often much too hard to balk, And in some cases may extrude The sense of moral
turpitude; Complete dispersal of the former Should metagrobolise the Trauma.
Christopher Pulling, 1964
5
Kipling's myths of love and death
See OED, s.v. Metagrobolise, which cites Rabelais. In SC the word means '
mystify' (pp. 107, 119). 'My theory is . . . The Light that Failed was a sort of
inverted, metagrobolised phantasmagoria based on Manon' (SM, p. 228); cf. the
Assistant's ...
6
Chambers English-Hindi Dictionary
( Tgaff чгг) ^nf ттт^Ьт; я. metagalaxy 3rftr»nrrfîRt metage л. ita% ant? TT *ГК ?РГГ
; Фп metagenesis л. (biol.) етФш^т, "rtfft- □Wi «íci^^Ri«; e# metagenetic ?г*т-
чтат, ^TfçîT ^-if«, ifeiapfoy metagnatboos а#. oU^t^N-^, чгт^Ч^Т metagrobolise v.
Sureśa Avasthī, Indujā Avasthī, 1981
His language parodies late scholastic philosophy. 76. 'And a wise man will not
abhor them' (cf. Ecclesiasticus XXXVIII.4). 77. To 'metagrobolise' is to sieve things
, thus to consider them too curiously. 78. 'Render unto Caesar the things which ...
François Rabelais, Dr. Andrew Brown, 2003
8
Pile: petals from St. Klaed's computer
Many merchants, solemn, skilled, Worked, but scale and size Began to
metagrobolise Even its founder-build- Ers ; its complexity conquers land and sea,
Its marble mortuary conscientiously Overturns geography, outlasts geology,
Outblasts ...
Brian Wilson Aldiss, Mike Wilks, 1979
9
The City Of Dreadful Night
A demon warder clutched me, Not so fast; First leave your hopes behind!
10
Wikiworld: Short Story
From prolific, genre-breaking writer Paul Di Filippo's Wikiworld, this short story is one of a set of mind-bending tales of humanity's alternate pasts, all too recognizable present, and far-flung futures.