CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO PHOTOOXIDISE
PRESENT
Present
I photooxidise
you photooxidise
he/she/it photooxidises
we photooxidise
you photooxidise
they photooxidise
Present continuous
I am photooxidising
you are photooxidising
he/she/it is photooxidising
we are photooxidising
you are photooxidising
they are photooxidising
Present perfect
I have photooxidised
you have photooxidised
he/she/it has photooxidised
we have photooxidised
you have photooxidised
they have photooxidised
Present perfect continuous
I have been photooxidising
you have been photooxidising
he/she/it has been photooxidising
we have been photooxidising
you have been photooxidising
they have been photooxidising
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 photooxidised
you photooxidised
he/she/it photooxidised
we photooxidised
you photooxidised
they photooxidised
Past continuous
I was photooxidising
you were photooxidising
he/she/it was photooxidising
we were photooxidising
you were photooxidising
they were photooxidising
Past perfect
I had photooxidised
you had photooxidised
he/she/it had photooxidised
we had photooxidised
you had photooxidised
they had photooxidised
Past perfect continuous
I had been photooxidising
you had been photooxidising
he/she/it had been photooxidising
we had been photooxidising
you had been photooxidising
they had been photooxidising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will photooxidise
you will photooxidise
he/she/it will photooxidise
we will photooxidise
you will photooxidise
they will photooxidise
Future continuous
I will be photooxidising
you will be photooxidising
he/she/it will be photooxidising
we will be photooxidising
you will be photooxidising
they will be photooxidising
Future perfect
I will have photooxidised
you will have photooxidised
he/she/it will have photooxidised
we will have photooxidised
you will have photooxidised
they will have photooxidised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been photooxidising
you will have been photooxidising
he/she/it will have been photooxidising
we will have been photooxidising
you will have been photooxidising
they will have been photooxidising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would photooxidise
you would photooxidise
he/she/it would photooxidise
we would photooxidise
you would photooxidise
they would photooxidise
Conditional continuous
I would be photooxidising
you would be photooxidising
he/she/it would be photooxidising
we would be photooxidising
you would be photooxidising
they would be photooxidising
Conditional perfect
I would have photooxidise
you would have photooxidise
he/she/it would have photooxidise
we would have photooxidise
you would have photooxidise
they would have photooxidise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been photooxidising
you would have been photooxidising
he/she/it would have been photooxidising
we would have been photooxidising
you would have been photooxidising
they would have been photooxidising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you photooxidise
we let´s photooxidise
you photooxidise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to photooxidise
Past participle
photooxidised
Present Participle
photooxidising
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 «PHOTOOXIDISE»
Discover the use of
photooxidise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
photooxidise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Organometallic Chemistry
... and is used in the synthesis of the hexahydrobenzofuran subunit of
avermectins and milbemycins412.2-Siloxyfurans are used to C- elongate
aldehydosugars while siloxybenzofurans photooxidise to dioxetanes and thence
to keto esters413.
Able, F. G. A. Stone, 1991
2
Genome Evolution of Photosynthetic Bacteria
Examples of photofer- rotrophs, organisms that can photooxidise ferrous iron, still
exist on Earth (Heising et al., 1999;Widdel et al., 1993). Alternatively, RCs might
have evolved from proteins used for sensing near-infrared radiation from ...
Some por- phyrins and a chlorin possessing an aromatic group at the meso
position have been synthesised and used as sensitisers to photooxidise various
phenols and naphthols to quinones.198 The reactions involve formation of O2(
1Ag) ...
A. Gilbert, Norman S. Allen, 2002
4
Organometallic Chemistry
They photooxidise to tin substituted allylic hydroperoxides, couple with vinyl
iodides to give cyclic conjugated dienes and 2-halovinylsulphoxides to give l-
sulphinyldienes10^ give vinyl phosphonates and can be fluorinated
electrophilically ...
E. W. Abel, D. A. Armitage, 1994
5
Photosynthesis: Plastid Biology, Energy Conversion and ...
PS II can both photoreduce and photooxidise cytochrome b559 (Stewart and
Brudvig, 1998) and consequently cytochrome b559 is thought to play a key role
in CET2. The physiological significance of CET2 is not known. It has been
frequently ...
Julian J. Eaton-Rye, Baishnab C Tripathy, Thomas D. Sharkey, 2011
... in mice was originally proposed to be due to production to excited oxygen
species such as singlet oxygen, the superoxide radical anion and hydrogen
peroxide (H202) [60,61]. NA is able to photooxidise 2,5-dimethyl furan and this
reaction ...
7
ToF-SIMS: Materials Analysis by Mass Spectrometry
Unlike metals, GaAs is easily photooxidised upon exposure 27,33 to UV light and
oxygen, which are the experimental conditions used to photooxidise SAMs.
Similar to alkanethiolate SAMs on metals,32 the rate of photooxidation is strongly
...
J. C. Vickerman, John C. Vickerman and David Briggs (Editors), David Briggs, 2013
8
Fundamentals of Polymer Degradation and Stabilization
Polyethylene has none, polypropylene has one while TPX has two (in-chain and
side-chain). Finally, thin polymer films photooxidise faster than thick films as
shown in Fig. 4.15. Here the oxygen diffusion rate will be governed by film
thickness ...
N.S. Allen, M. Edge, 1992
9
Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review
... both bacteria and algae have been shown to produce photosensitised
compounds that can actively photooxidise DMS to DMSO (Fuse et al. 1997, 2000
), and the occurrence of these processes may be more common in productive
regions.
R. N. Gibson, R. J. A. Atkinson, J. D. M. Gordon, 2004
10
In vitro skin toxicology: irritation, phototoxicity, ...
Some photohaemolytic substances photooxidise histidine while others do not (40
). Two drugs, phototoxic in vivo, have been reported to photooxidise histidine but
were not photohaemolytic (7). Skin models have a potential use especially for ...
André Rougier, Alan M. Goldberg, Howard I. Maibach, 1994