CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO MISSORT
PRESENT
Present
I missort
you missort
he/she/it missorts
we missort
you missort
they missort
Present continuous
I am missorting
you are missorting
he/she/it is missorting
we are missorting
you are missorting
they are missorting
Present perfect
I have missorted
you have missorted
he/she/it has missorted
we have missorted
you have missorted
they have missorted
Present perfect continuous
I have been missorting
you have been missorting
he/she/it has been missorting
we have been missorting
you have been missorting
they have been missorting
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 missorted
you missorted
he/she/it missorted
we missorted
you missorted
they missorted
Past continuous
I was missorting
you were missorting
he/she/it was missorting
we were missorting
you were missorting
they were missorting
Past perfect
I had missorted
you had missorted
he/she/it had missorted
we had missorted
you had missorted
they had missorted
Past perfect continuous
I had been missorting
you had been missorting
he/she/it had been missorting
we had been missorting
you had been missorting
they had been missorting
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will missort
you will missort
he/she/it will missort
we will missort
you will missort
they will missort
Future continuous
I will be missorting
you will be missorting
he/she/it will be missorting
we will be missorting
you will be missorting
they will be missorting
Future perfect
I will have missorted
you will have missorted
he/she/it will have missorted
we will have missorted
you will have missorted
they will have missorted
Future perfect continuous
I will have been missorting
you will have been missorting
he/she/it will have been missorting
we will have been missorting
you will have been missorting
they will have been missorting
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would missort
you would missort
he/she/it would missort
we would missort
you would missort
they would missort
Conditional continuous
I would be missorting
you would be missorting
he/she/it would be missorting
we would be missorting
you would be missorting
they would be missorting
Conditional perfect
I would have missort
you would have missort
he/she/it would have missort
we would have missort
you would have missort
they would have missort
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been missorting
you would have been missorting
he/she/it would have been missorting
we would have been missorting
you would have been missorting
they would have been missorting
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you missort
we let´s missort
you missort
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
missorted
Present Participle
missorting
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 «MISSORT»
Discover the use of
missort in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
missort and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Proceedings of the 1972 International Conference on ...
Because of the 3d + 1 28 necessity of maintaining the missort rate below 1
percent, there is some temptation to select the margin to be 4 or 5 (corresponding
to error probabilities of and However, this approach fails to take into account the
fact ...
IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society, 1972
2
Counter-institutions: Jacques Derrida and the Question of ...
A number, therefore, by which we calculate another coming of age. Manhood
perhaps (Law of the Father). First letter of (the age of) Raelity, when (albeit by dint
of a missort) we all grow up and face today's realities, the realities of audit.
Simon Wortham, Christopher Fynsk, 2006
3
Anthrax Detection: Agencies Need to Validate Sampling ...
Sampling Samples collected Positive samples Agency* completed Number and
type General location" Number and type General location Lucerne Post Office
CDC and 10/28/01 EPA 8 premoistened swabs Missort box, case 1 positive ...
Keith A. Rhodes (au), 2005
4
Experimental Glycoscience: Glycobiology
... guidance defects in specific Slit, Kal-1 neuron classes Dorsal RGC axons
missort in the optic tract Dorsal RGC axons missort in the optic tract Abnormal
dorsal-ventral axis formation Destruction of muscle development and abnormal
vascular ...
Naoyuki Taniguchi, Akemi Suzuki, Yukishige Ito, 2009
5
Applications of Chimeric Genes and Hybrid Proteins, Part B: ...
Selection of Yeast Mutants that Missort and Secrete Invertase Fusion Proteins In
addition to using invertase fusions to determine the cis-acting determinants
necessary for CPY recognition and sorting,3 the CPY–invertase fusion protein
has ...
6
The National Rural Letter Carrier
Missent mail is generally not deliverable on the day it arrives in the wrong zone
and because of that a missent error, unlike a missort or missequence error, is not
part of the calculation for the 98 percent quality threshold. 4. What is a missort ...
7
Computer science source book
Thus better recognition and missort rates can be expected on outgoing mail than
on incoming mail. Performance figures on the postal address reader SARI show
that the state of the art of postal address reading is well advanced. On a sample ...
8
McGraw-Hill encyclopedia of science & technology
Thus better recognition and missort rates can be expected on outgoing mail than
on incoming mail. Performance figures on the postal address reader SARI show
that the state of the art of postal address reading is well advanced. On a sample ...
9
Data processing: a text and project manual
Cards can and often do missort. A card that is off-punched could missort. A
nicked 9 edge could missort a card. Any card that falls vertically could missort.
The following operating suggestions will not stop missorting, but will aid in
guaranteeing.
Thomas J. Cashman, William J. Keys, 1974
10
McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Electronics and Computers
Thus better recognition and missort rates can be expected on outgoing mail than
on incoming mail. Performance figures on the postal address reader SARI show
that the state of the art of postal address reading is well advanced. On a sample ...