CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO OUTSPANNING
PRESENT
Present
I outspan
you outspan
he/she/it outspans
we outspan
you outspan
they outspan
Present continuous
I am outspanning
you are outspanning
he/she/it is outspanning
we are outspanning
you are outspanning
they are outspanning
Present perfect
I have outspanned
you have outspanned
he/she/it has outspanned
we have outspanned
you have outspanned
they have outspanned
Present perfect continuous
I have been outspanning
you have been outspanning
he/she/it has been outspanning
we have been outspanning
you have been outspanning
they have been outspanning
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 outspanned
you outspanned
he/she/it outspanned
we outspanned
you outspanned
they outspanned
Past continuous
I was outspanning
you were outspanning
he/she/it was outspanning
we were outspanning
you were outspanning
they were outspanning
Past perfect
I had outspanned
you had outspanned
he/she/it had outspanned
we had outspanned
you had outspanned
they had outspanned
Past perfect continuous
I had been outspanning
you had been outspanning
he/she/it had been outspanning
we had been outspanning
you had been outspanning
they had been outspanning
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will outspan
you will outspan
he/she/it will outspan
we will outspan
you will outspan
they will outspan
Future continuous
I will be outspanning
you will be outspanning
he/she/it will be outspanning
we will be outspanning
you will be outspanning
they will be outspanning
Future perfect
I will have outspanned
you will have outspanned
he/she/it will have outspanned
we will have outspanned
you will have outspanned
they will have outspanned
Future perfect continuous
I will have been outspanning
you will have been outspanning
he/she/it will have been outspanning
we will have been outspanning
you will have been outspanning
they will have been outspanning
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would outspanning
you would outspanning
he/she/it would outspanning
we would outspanning
you would outspanning
they would outspanning
Conditional continuous
I would be outspanning
you would be outspanning
he/she/it would be outspanning
we would be outspanning
you would be outspanning
they would be outspanning
Conditional perfect
I would have outspanning
you would have outspanning
he/she/it would have outspanning
we would have outspanning
you would have outspanning
they would have outspanning
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been outspanning
you would have been outspanning
he/she/it would have been outspanning
we would have been outspanning
you would have been outspanning
they would have been outspanning
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you outspan
we let´s outspan
you outspan
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
outspanned
Present Participle
outspanning
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 «OUTSPANNING»
Discover the use of
outspanning in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
outspanning and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Chambers's Miscellany of Instructive and Entertaining Tracts
oxen, as they are turned loose at " outspanning " to pick up their own Mipport. In.
some places, government lands have been reserved for outspanning stations ;
but little difficulty occurs where no -such provision has been made, for scarcely a
...
William Chambers, Robert Chambers
Unless he saw the boys outspanning he would not get off, and if one of the hens
ventured out he would rush back at her in a great state and try to bustle her back
into the coop. But often it happens while trekking that something goes wrong with
...
3
The Parting Years: A British Family and the End of Empire
I always did the harnessing and outspanning, but on that particular day I had a
music lesson for which I had not practised and, having arrived early, I told Dick,
who was about eight years' old, to out- span Kroon and tie him to the tree, and I ...
4
The American Journal of Anatomy
The same computation applied to the measurements of the sections of the
membrane give the outspanning zone in the 1st half turn 3.2 times the width, and
in the 3rd half turn 3.7 times the width it has in the 7th half turn. That the
differences in ...
5
Contributions by Members of the Department of Anatomy
The same computation applied to the measurements of the sections of the
membrane give the outspanning zone in the 1st half turn 3.2 times the width, and
in the 3rd half turn 3.7 times the width it has in the 7th half turn. That the
differences in ...
Tulane University. Dept. of Anatomy, 1916
6
The statute law of Southern Rhodesia, in force on or made ...
In this Act— Interpretation "cattle" includes all animals and stock used or driven
by ofterms- persons when travelling; "outspan" and "outspanning" include the
halting of travellers for a period not exceeding twenty-four hours and the terms
stated ...
Southern Rhodesia, Hugh Beadle, 1963
7
Transactions of the Geological Society of South Africa
1 would endeavour to describe " What interest is communicated to an
outspanning. Now 1 have been a great traveller in South Africa and for tens of
thousands of miles has a bullock wagon been my home, and consequently I
know something ...
8
The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society: JRGS
... to.be impassable for many days together. And it is only those persons who
have experienced the miseries of " outspanning " on their banks, drenched to the
skin whilst waiting four or five days for the waters to run out, who can fully
estimate ...
Royal Geographical Society, 1836
9
The Diamond Mines of South Africa: Some Account of Their ...
... plunging, and bucking at the check of the bits and prick of the spurs — the
outspanning and inspanning of hundreds of oxen — the swaying and creaking
wagons — the writhing, darting lash of the cracking whips of the drivers — the
sulking, ...
Gardner F. Williams, 2011
10
Travel and Adventure in South-East Africa
In the afternoon we made a second trek with the waggons, and took another
round on horseback, outspanning sufficiently early to allow time to form a camp
and give the bullocks an opportunity of filling themselves before they were tied up
for ...
Frederick Courteney Selous, 2011