CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO METRIFIES
PRESENT
Present
I metrify
you metrify
he/she/it metrifies
we metrify
you metrify
they metrify
Present continuous
I am metrifying
you are metrifying
he/she/it is metrifying
we are metrifying
you are metrifying
they are metrifying
Present perfect
I have metrified
you have metrified
he/she/it has metrified
we have metrified
you have metrified
they have metrified
Present perfect continuous
I have been metrifying
you have been metrifying
he/she/it has been metrifying
we have been metrifying
you have been metrifying
they have been metrifying
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 metrified
you metrified
he/she/it metrified
we metrified
you metrified
they metrified
Past continuous
I was metrifying
you were metrifying
he/she/it was metrifying
we were metrifying
you were metrifying
they were metrifying
Past perfect
I had metrified
you had metrified
he/she/it had metrified
we had metrified
you had metrified
they had metrified
Past perfect continuous
I had been metrifying
you had been metrifying
he/she/it had been metrifying
we had been metrifying
you had been metrifying
they had been metrifying
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will metrify
you will metrify
he/she/it will metrify
we will metrify
you will metrify
they will metrify
Future continuous
I will be metrifying
you will be metrifying
he/she/it will be metrifying
we will be metrifying
you will be metrifying
they will be metrifying
Future perfect
I will have metrified
you will have metrified
he/she/it will have metrified
we will have metrified
you will have metrified
they will have metrified
Future perfect continuous
I will have been metrifying
you will have been metrifying
he/she/it will have been metrifying
we will have been metrifying
you will have been metrifying
they will have been metrifying
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would metrifies
you would metrifies
he/she/it would metrifies
we would metrifies
you would metrifies
they would metrifies
Conditional continuous
I would be metrifying
you would be metrifying
he/she/it would be metrifying
we would be metrifying
you would be metrifying
they would be metrifying
Conditional perfect
I would have metrifies
you would have metrifies
he/she/it would have metrifies
we would have metrifies
you would have metrifies
they would have metrifies
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been metrifying
you would have been metrifying
he/she/it would have been metrifying
we would have been metrifying
you would have been metrifying
they would have been metrifying
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you metrify
we let´s metrify
you metrify
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
metrified
Present Participle
metrifying
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 «METRIFIES»
Discover the use of
metrifies in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
metrifies and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Advocates of Poetry, a Reader of American Poet Critics, ...
We assign therefore some reading, almost arbitrary, which perhaps metrifies the
line sufficiently and respects its structural logic, and we think of that perverseness
in Donne which led him so often to mock the law without technically breaking it.
2
Under Fire: The Story of a Squad
in all possible tones, commanding a pitiful, sometimes like a prophet and anon
like one shipwrecked; he metrifies with his cry the chorus of choking and plaintive
voices that try so terribly to extol their suffering. Some one comes forward, blindly
...
3
The Independent magazine (ed. by J. Fletcher).
Sternhold thus metrifies the passage : In them the Lord made for the sun A place
of great renown, Who like a bridegroom ready trimmed Doth from his chamber
come. Ready-trimmed in the language of that time, meant nothing more f 5 ...
4
Grammatical Theory and Romance Languages: Selected Papers ...
In the verb, no foot structure is built at the lexical level, but prominence is
projected by the rightmost syllable of the domain. Secondary stress in both nouns
and verbs is assigned by a single rule which metrifies the string of unstressed
syllables ...
5
The Subtext of Form in the English Renaissance: Proportion ...
In the context of this long passage from the Phaedo, then, Socrates metrifies
Aesop in order to satisfy a divine command to produce music, which he equates
with philosophy. Philosophy, in fact, "is the noblest and most excellent Music.
6
Principles of English Stress
... manner of (10). (10) Stress Preservation under "0" shift (binary foot) 3. 60. 2
Recall that we take the morphemefy of (9b) to be unstressed, as argued in 3.2
above. 5 The assumption that oid normally metrifies as a foot Weak preservation
173.
... METRICATION METRICATIONS METRICISM METRICISMS METRICIZE
METRICIZED METRICIZES METRICIZING METRICS METRIFIED METRIFIES
METRIFY METRIFYING METRING METRIST METRISTS METRITIS METRITISES
METRO ...
Maliha Mendoza Mahmood, 2013
8
Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Lexical Blending
By contrast, -ic always metrifies its final empty nucleus as 4 W), e.g. Ger(manico),
(e'lec)(tro'nico), and -ize, -ate form a weak foot (HW), e.g. (ago)(nize), (sujfo)(cate)
, to mention just a few metrically stable Latinate suffixes. The other class ...
Vincent Renner, François Maniez, Pierre Arnaud, 2012
9
Under Fire: The Story of a Squad [Facsimile Edition]
in all possible tones, commanding a pitiful, sometimes like a prophet and anon
like one shipwrecked; he metrifies with his cry the chorus of choking and plaintive
voices that try so terribly to extol their suffering. Some one comes forward, blindly
...
10
Proceedings of the XVII Meeting of Generative Grammar: ...
We may in fact take SP to account for the syncope. The case in (33) differs from
each of those in (32), because American English generally metrifies rv, whence (
lava) (torv) . (mil iV(tarv) . etc. While the class of cases in which fiiy is preceded by
...
E. Fava, Giuseppe Francescato, 1992