CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO MISDIVIDE
PRESENT
Present
I misdivide
you misdivide
he/she/it misdivides
we misdivide
you misdivide
they misdivide
Present continuous
I am misdividing
you are misdividing
he/she/it is misdividing
we are misdividing
you are misdividing
they are misdividing
Present perfect
I have misdivided
you have misdivided
he/she/it has misdivided
we have misdivided
you have misdivided
they have misdivided
Present perfect continuous
I have been misdividing
you have been misdividing
he/she/it has been misdividing
we have been misdividing
you have been misdividing
they have been misdividing
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 misdivided
you misdivided
he/she/it misdivided
we misdivided
you misdivided
they misdivided
Past continuous
I was misdividing
you were misdividing
he/she/it was misdividing
we were misdividing
you were misdividing
they were misdividing
Past perfect
I had misdivided
you had misdivided
he/she/it had misdivided
we had misdivided
you had misdivided
they had misdivided
Past perfect continuous
I had been misdividing
you had been misdividing
he/she/it had been misdividing
we had been misdividing
you had been misdividing
they had been misdividing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will misdivide
you will misdivide
he/she/it will misdivide
we will misdivide
you will misdivide
they will misdivide
Future continuous
I will be misdividing
you will be misdividing
he/she/it will be misdividing
we will be misdividing
you will be misdividing
they will be misdividing
Future perfect
I will have misdivided
you will have misdivided
he/she/it will have misdivided
we will have misdivided
you will have misdivided
they will have misdivided
Future perfect continuous
I will have been misdividing
you will have been misdividing
he/she/it will have been misdividing
we will have been misdividing
you will have been misdividing
they will have been misdividing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would misdivide
you would misdivide
he/she/it would misdivide
we would misdivide
you would misdivide
they would misdivide
Conditional continuous
I would be misdividing
you would be misdividing
he/she/it would be misdividing
we would be misdividing
you would be misdividing
they would be misdividing
Conditional perfect
I would have misdivide
you would have misdivide
he/she/it would have misdivide
we would have misdivide
you would have misdivide
they would have misdivide
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been misdividing
you would have been misdividing
he/she/it would have been misdividing
we would have been misdividing
you would have been misdividing
they would have been misdividing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you misdivide
we let´s misdivide
you misdivide
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
misdivided
Present Participle
misdividing
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 «MISDIVIDE»
Discover the use of
misdivide in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
misdivide and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Plant Centromere Biology
Susceptibility of chromosomes to misdivision The centric misdivision process is
annoyingly susceptible to undefined external factors: the same chromosome in
the same genetic background may misdivide readily in one growing season and
...
Jiming Jiang, James A. Birchler, 2013
2
Genetic Resources, Chromosome Engineering, and Crop ...
In wheat, such transfers are made possible by the strong tendency of univalent
chromosomes to misdivide at meiosis and give rise to one-armed (telocentric)
chromosomes. If both an alien chromosome and its wheat homoeolog are ...
Ram J. Singh, Prem P. Jauhar, 2004
3
Wheat Science, Today and Tomorrow
This can be achieved by taking advantage of the fact that univalents in wheat
frequently misdivide at meiosis I. If both the alien chromosome and its wheat
homoeologue are monosomic, both will be univalent at meiosis. When both
happen to ...
L. T. Evans, William James Peacock, 1981
4
Cytogenetics of aneuploids
At anaphase II, the univalent may divide normally if it remained undivided during
anaphase I. If, however, it underwent division earlier during anaphase I, it may
misdivide at anaphase II. Similarly, the telocentrics and isochromosomes ...
During the second meiotic division, or even before, the isochromosomes may
misdivide again, each forming two telochromosomes (Fig. 10-27). Univalents
usually lag behind the normal bi- valents at anaphase. The processes outlined in
...
6
The Christian remembrancer; or, The Churchman's Biblical, ...
is thus both accounted for and refuted : for the construction of the sentence (if we
misdivide a word) will be — ccn "art *s y-w <tt, " Wo ! land of ships with the
shadowy wings 1" or, " Wo ! shadowy wings of the land of ships!" Hence arose
the ...
7
The Christian Remembrancer: A Quarterly Review
is thus both accounted for and refuted: for the construction of the sentence (if we
misdivide a word) will lie—cs: 52“. ray-u m, “ W0! land of ships with the shadowy
wings !” or, “ Wu! shadowy wings of the land of ships l” Hence arose the ...
8
The Great Ice Age: Climate Change and Life
Polyploids seem to form when something is going wrong with normal breeding:
for exampleiftwo related species come into contactand produce sterile hybrids. A
hybrid swarm forms, some ofwhichmay misdivide and create polyploids.
J.A. Chapman, S.A. all at The Open University Drury, R.C.L. Wilson, 2005
These are the two chromosomes that occur most frequently as spontaneous
monosomes in natural populations of cotton. Most of the monosomic
chromosomes are fairly stable and misdivide infrequently to give telocentric or
isochromosomes ...
Ernst W. Caspari, John G. Scandalios, 1985
10
Christopher Marlowe in Context
... the horizontal and what Tamburlaine refers to as the 'perpendicular'. Are they
blind because they misdivide the earth into a mere 'triple region'? This is
Blundeville again: '[T]he auncient Cosmographers, not knowing then the West
Indies, ...
Emily C. Bartels, Emma Smith, 2013