CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO POURTRAHED
PRESENT
Present
I pourtrahed
you pourtrahed
he/she/it pourtraheds
we pourtrahed
you pourtrahed
they pourtrahed
Present continuous
I am pourtraheding
you are pourtraheding
he/she/it is pourtraheding
we are pourtraheding
you are pourtraheding
they are pourtraheding
Present perfect
I have pourtraheded
you have pourtraheded
he/she/it has pourtraheded
we have pourtraheded
you have pourtraheded
they have pourtraheded
Present perfect continuous
I have been pourtraheding
you have been pourtraheding
he/she/it has been pourtraheding
we have been pourtraheding
you have been pourtraheding
they have been pourtraheding
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 pourtraheded
you pourtraheded
he/she/it pourtraheded
we pourtraheded
you pourtraheded
they pourtraheded
Past continuous
I was pourtraheding
you were pourtraheding
he/she/it was pourtraheding
we were pourtraheding
you were pourtraheding
they were pourtraheding
Past perfect
I had pourtraheded
you had pourtraheded
he/she/it had pourtraheded
we had pourtraheded
you had pourtraheded
they had pourtraheded
Past perfect continuous
I had been pourtraheding
you had been pourtraheding
he/she/it had been pourtraheding
we had been pourtraheding
you had been pourtraheding
they had been pourtraheding
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will pourtrahed
you will pourtrahed
he/she/it will pourtrahed
we will pourtrahed
you will pourtrahed
they will pourtrahed
Future continuous
I will be pourtraheding
you will be pourtraheding
he/she/it will be pourtraheding
we will be pourtraheding
you will be pourtraheding
they will be pourtraheding
Future perfect
I will have pourtraheded
you will have pourtraheded
he/she/it will have pourtraheded
we will have pourtraheded
you will have pourtraheded
they will have pourtraheded
Future perfect continuous
I will have been pourtraheding
you will have been pourtraheding
he/she/it will have been pourtraheding
we will have been pourtraheding
you will have been pourtraheding
they will have been pourtraheding
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would pourtrahed
you would pourtrahed
he/she/it would pourtrahed
we would pourtrahed
you would pourtrahed
they would pourtrahed
Conditional continuous
I would be pourtraheding
you would be pourtraheding
he/she/it would be pourtraheding
we would be pourtraheding
you would be pourtraheding
they would be pourtraheding
Conditional perfect
I would have pourtrahed
you would have pourtrahed
he/she/it would have pourtrahed
we would have pourtrahed
you would have pourtrahed
they would have pourtrahed
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been pourtraheding
you would have been pourtraheding
he/she/it would have been pourtraheding
we would have been pourtraheding
you would have been pourtraheding
they would have been pourtraheding
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you pourtrahed
we let´s pourtrahed
you pourtrahed
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
pourtraheded
Present Participle
pourtraheding
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 «POURTRAHED»
Discover the use of
pourtrahed in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pourtrahed and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Behind the Arras: Tapestry Ekphrasis in Spenser and Shakespeare
... soul: Thence backe againe faire Alma led them right, And soone into a goodly
Parlour brought, That was with royall arras richly dight, In which was nothing
pourtrahed, nor wrought, Not wrought, nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought.
2
The Faerie Queene: Complete in Five Volumes: Book One; Book ...
7 avoided: expelled; privily: secretly (with a play on “privy,” a toilet). 8 arras:
tapestry; “royall” may indicate purple, an appropriate color for the heart (Hamilton
). 9 pourtrahed: portrayed. 10 floure: floor. 11 amate: accompany. 12 aggrate:
please.
Edmund Spenser, Abraham Stoll, 2008
3
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser
Thence backe againe faire Alma led them right, And soone into a goodly parlour
brought, That was with royall arras richly dight,1 In which was nothing pourtrahed
nor wrought ; Not wrought nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought.
Edmund Spenser, Francis James Child, 1855
4
The Works of the British Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical ...
Thence back-I againe faire Alma led them right, And soone into a goodly parlnur
brought, That was with royall arras richly dight, ln which was nothing pourtrahed
nor wrought, Not wrought nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought : xxxtv. And in ...
Thence backe againe faire Alma led them right, . . . ' And s Jone into a. goodly
Parlour brought That was with royal] arras richly dight, In which was nothing
pourtrahed nor wrought, Not wrought, nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought?
XXXIV.
Edmund Spenser, Ralph Church, 1759
6
Faerie queene. book III-V
The wals were round about apparelled ~25" mstly clothes of Arras and of Toure;
In which with cunning" hand was pourtrahed “Mm and her paramoiue, The fayre
Adonis, turned to a flowre; A worke of rare device and wondrous wit. First did it ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1842
7
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
Thence backe againe faire Alma led them right, And soone into a goodly parlour
brought, That was with royall arras richly dight, In which was nothing pourtrahed
nor wrought; Not wrought nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought: xxxrv. And in ...
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
Thence backe againe faire Alma led them right, And soone into a goodly parlour
brought, That was with royall arras richly dight,1 In which was nothing pourtrahed
nor wrought ; Not wrought nor pourtrahed, but easie to be thought : XXXIV.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
9
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser in Five Volumes
Thereat the courteous Knight displeased was, And said ; “ Old syre, it seemes
thou hast not red How ill it sits with that -same silver hed, In vaine to mocke, or
mockt in vaine to bee: But if thou be, as thou art pourtrahed With Natures pen, in
ages ...
10
Exemplars of Tudor Architecture, adapted to modern ...
Spencer mentions that description of tapestry: “ Thence back again faire Alma led
them rightI And some into a goodly parlour brought, That was with royall arras
richly dight, In which was nothing pourtrahed nor wrought; Not wrought, nor ...
Thomas Frederick HUNT, 1830