CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO OUTWEARY
PRESENT
Present
I outweary
you outweary
he/she/it outwearies
we outweary
you outweary
they outweary
Present continuous
I am outwearying
you are outwearying
he/she/it is outwearying
we are outwearying
you are outwearying
they are outwearying
Present perfect
I have outwearied
you have outwearied
he/she/it has outwearied
we have outwearied
you have outwearied
they have outwearied
Present perfect continuous
I have been outwearying
you have been outwearying
he/she/it has been outwearying
we have been outwearying
you have been outwearying
they have been outwearying
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 outwearied
you outwearied
he/she/it outwearied
we outwearied
you outwearied
they outwearied
Past continuous
I was outwearying
you were outwearying
he/she/it was outwearying
we were outwearying
you were outwearying
they were outwearying
Past perfect
I had outwearied
you had outwearied
he/she/it had outwearied
we had outwearied
you had outwearied
they had outwearied
Past perfect continuous
I had been outwearying
you had been outwearying
he/she/it had been outwearying
we had been outwearying
you had been outwearying
they had been outwearying
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will outweary
you will outweary
he/she/it will outweary
we will outweary
you will outweary
they will outweary
Future continuous
I will be outwearying
you will be outwearying
he/she/it will be outwearying
we will be outwearying
you will be outwearying
they will be outwearying
Future perfect
I will have outwearied
you will have outwearied
he/she/it will have outwearied
we will have outwearied
you will have outwearied
they will have outwearied
Future perfect continuous
I will have been outwearying
you will have been outwearying
he/she/it will have been outwearying
we will have been outwearying
you will have been outwearying
they will have been outwearying
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would outweary
you would outweary
he/she/it would outweary
we would outweary
you would outweary
they would outweary
Conditional continuous
I would be outwearying
you would be outwearying
he/she/it would be outwearying
we would be outwearying
you would be outwearying
they would be outwearying
Conditional perfect
I would have outweary
you would have outweary
he/she/it would have outweary
we would have outweary
you would have outweary
they would have outweary
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been outwearying
you would have been outwearying
he/she/it would have been outwearying
we would have been outwearying
you would have been outwearying
they would have been outwearying
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you outweary
we let´s outweary
you outweary
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
outwearied
Present Participle
outwearying
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 «OUTWEARY»
Discover the use of
outweary in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
outweary and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Encyclopædia Metropolitana; Or, Universal Dictionary of ...
OUTWEARY, to weary out; to tire or fatigue out. Five hundred rolling years hath
this stifl' nation strove T'exhnust the boundless stores of our unfathom'd love. Be't
so them—Yet once more are we rcsolv'd to try '1" outweary them through all their
...
Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, 1845
2
Encyclopaedia metropolitana: or Universal dictionary of ...
OUTWEARY, to weary out; to tire or fatigue out. Five hundred rolling years hath
this stiff nation strove T'exhaust the boundless stores of our uufathom'd love. Be't
so then. — Yet once more are we resolv'd to try T' outweary them through all their
...
Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, 1845
... T' exhaust the boundless stores of our unsathom'd " love. "Be 't so then 3 yet
once more are we resolv'd to try " T' outweary them through all their sins' variety I
" Assemble, ten days hence, the numerous people here, " To draw the royal lot ...
members throughout the winter, inactive and far from their homes, hoping
perhaps either to outweary them by delay, or to promote his cause more
successfully by treating with them individually. For to the eternal honour of these
prelates it is to ...
5
The American Quarterly Church Review
Bred in luxury and delighting in the effeminate pleasures of the Court, she could
outweary strong men in the roughest rides across the country, and, although a
woman, where even men might pity or hold back, she was cruel, and ...
6
The works of the rev. Henry Scougal: containing the life of ...
Their constancy in their sufferings did amaze their bloody persecutors, and
outweary the cruelty of their tormentors; and they rejoiced in nothing more t han
that they were accounted worthy to suffer shame for the name of Jesus. And what
shall ...
Henry Scougal, Gilbert Burnet, 1818
7
Statan or Intellect Without God
For havoc may be heal'd, and tears And wrongs of desolated kingdoms, change;
But spirit can outweary vaunting time, And taint a cent'ry with corrupting thought.
Ye prostituted souls! when mind is judged, How ghastly from your slumber will ...
8
The Works ... Re-edited. - London, G. Kearsley 1806
T' exhaust the boundless stores of our unfathom'd " Be 't so then; yet once more
are we resolv'd to try “ T' outweary them through all their sins' variety: “ Assemble,
ten days hence, the numerous people “ here, [bean “ To draw the royal lot which
...
9
History of the United States, from the Discovery of the ...
If the efforts of the Quakers cannot obtain “the olive branch of toleration, we bless
the providence of God, resolving by patience to outweary persecution, and by our
constant sufferings to obtain a victory more-glorious than our adversaries can ...
10
The poets and poetry of Europe
Three long years have o'erwhelmed me in sadness, Since the sun veiled his
vision of gladness : Sorrow be banished, — for sorrow is dreary ; Sorrow and
gloom but outweary the weary. In my heart I perceive the day breaking ; I cannot
resist ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Cornelius Conway Felton, 1855