CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO MISWORD
PRESENT
Present
I misword
you misword
he/she/it miswords
we misword
you misword
they misword
Present continuous
I am miswording
you are miswording
he/she/it is miswording
we are miswording
you are miswording
they are miswording
Present perfect
I have misworded
you have misworded
he/she/it has misworded
we have misworded
you have misworded
they have misworded
Present perfect continuous
I have been miswording
you have been miswording
he/she/it has been miswording
we have been miswording
you have been miswording
they have been miswording
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 misworded
you misworded
he/she/it misworded
we misworded
you misworded
they misworded
Past continuous
I was miswording
you were miswording
he/she/it was miswording
we were miswording
you were miswording
they were miswording
Past perfect
I had misworded
you had misworded
he/she/it had misworded
we had misworded
you had misworded
they had misworded
Past perfect continuous
I had been miswording
you had been miswording
he/she/it had been miswording
we had been miswording
you had been miswording
they had been miswording
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will misword
you will misword
he/she/it will misword
we will misword
you will misword
they will misword
Future continuous
I will be miswording
you will be miswording
he/she/it will be miswording
we will be miswording
you will be miswording
they will be miswording
Future perfect
I will have misworded
you will have misworded
he/she/it will have misworded
we will have misworded
you will have misworded
they will have misworded
Future perfect continuous
I will have been miswording
you will have been miswording
he/she/it will have been miswording
we will have been miswording
you will have been miswording
they will have been miswording
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would misword
you would misword
he/she/it would misword
we would misword
you would misword
they would misword
Conditional continuous
I would be miswording
you would be miswording
he/she/it would be miswording
we would be miswording
you would be miswording
they would be miswording
Conditional perfect
I would have misword
you would have misword
he/she/it would have misword
we would have misword
you would have misword
they would have misword
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been miswording
you would have been miswording
he/she/it would have been miswording
we would have been miswording
you would have been miswording
they would have been miswording
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you misword
we let´s misword
you misword
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
misworded
Present Participle
miswording
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 «MISWORD»
Discover the use of
misword in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
misword and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The English dialect dictionary, being the complete ...
Here have I served one man or his father this t'orty year, and never had a
misword, Hear“ Eng. Peas. (1893) 238. 11v.Wc1r.l \Vc wuz married farty year, an'
'e never so much as give me a misword. s.\iV1:1r.l \Ve was fellowservants nigh
upon ...
2
Garner's Modern American Usage
Cf. macrolinguistics. Middle English. The English language used from about a.d.
1100 to 1500. misword, n. An ill-advised word used harshly or angrily. misword,
vb. To express erroneously; to word badly. mixed construction. A phrasing that ...
3
Interpretation and Understanding
... mishear, misinfer, misinform, misintend, misinterpret, mismean, misname,
misprint, mispronounce, mispunctuate, misquote, misread, misrepeat,
misrepresent, mis-say, mis-spell, mis-style, mis-swear, mistranslate, misuse,
misword ...
4
Mysticism and Poetry on a Basis of Experience
A woman who used to work in my house told me that she ' never 'ad a misword
with her 'usband.' I asked her what she meant precisely by never having a
misword. She said, ' Theein' and thouin' an' cursin' an' swearin' — that's what I do
...
Alfred Allen Brockington, 1934
5
Twenty Of The Plays: Being the Whole Number Printed in ...
_ laugh 6 my father com rn 1 as; , 5;"ZW misword vpon yo Þh ful' so? well, yeeid, [
Hip 'T'e- ' brother His, . No" Wne on m 'T mde . - si t, haue (A 1 lmizsi'mg s; bee's
co herbe 't pardon me in cran"' seeme to dcscmlr'. your came before my (when ...
William Shakespeare, George Steevens, 1766
6
Forget-me-not: A Christmas, New Year's and Birthday Present ...
I like her full as well as Augusta Brookes, and I am afraid that J em likes her much
better. And, as for yourself, Master Matthew, why, I 've known you these fifty years,
and never heard man, woman, or child, speak a misword of you in my life.
The majority of English speakers, for example, are enormously inventive at
misleading others through concealment, conventions of emphasis,
foreshortening, timing, calculated mumbling, shrewd misunderstanding, precise
misword- ing, ...
8
Semicentennial Publications of the University of California
... legiti- matize, lingualize, linotype (in Century Dictionary Supplement), lobby,
manifold, misaddress, misword, monograph, monologuize, monophthongize,
monosyllabize, monotone, mutate, Newmanize, obsolesce, obvert, optimize,
ordinate, ...
University of California, Berkeley
9
The Diary of Samuel Pepys:
He then came down, took away his ladder, not a misword said to him, and by
whose order it was done was not then known. The merchants were glad and
joyful, manypeoplewere gathered together, and against the Exchange madea
bonfire.
Using cliches at all in attempt to be serious is pretty shady in the first place, but to
misword a cliche is certainly missing the point. An example would be, “you only
get 15 minutes of fame” which originated from Andy Warhol's “In the future, ...