CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO POWELLISE
PRESENT
Present
I powellise
you powellise
he/she/it powellises
we powellise
you powellise
they powellise
Present continuous
I am powellising
you are powellising
he/she/it is powellising
we are powellising
you are powellising
they are powellising
Present perfect
I have powellised
you have powellised
he/she/it has powellised
we have powellised
you have powellised
they have powellised
Present perfect continuous
I have been powellising
you have been powellising
he/she/it has been powellising
we have been powellising
you have been powellising
they have been powellising
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 powellised
you powellised
he/she/it powellised
we powellised
you powellised
they powellised
Past continuous
I was powellising
you were powellising
he/she/it was powellising
we were powellising
you were powellising
they were powellising
Past perfect
I had powellised
you had powellised
he/she/it had powellised
we had powellised
you had powellised
they had powellised
Past perfect continuous
I had been powellising
you had been powellising
he/she/it had been powellising
we had been powellising
you had been powellising
they had been powellising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will powellise
you will powellise
he/she/it will powellise
we will powellise
you will powellise
they will powellise
Future continuous
I will be powellising
you will be powellising
he/she/it will be powellising
we will be powellising
you will be powellising
they will be powellising
Future perfect
I will have powellised
you will have powellised
he/she/it will have powellised
we will have powellised
you will have powellised
they will have powellised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been powellising
you will have been powellising
he/she/it will have been powellising
we will have been powellising
you will have been powellising
they will have been powellising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would powellise
you would powellise
he/she/it would powellise
we would powellise
you would powellise
they would powellise
Conditional continuous
I would be powellising
you would be powellising
he/she/it would be powellising
we would be powellising
you would be powellising
they would be powellising
Conditional perfect
I would have powellise
you would have powellise
he/she/it would have powellise
we would have powellise
you would have powellise
they would have powellise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been powellising
you would have been powellising
he/she/it would have been powellising
we would have been powellising
you would have been powellising
they would have been powellising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you powellise
we let´s powellise
you powellise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
powellised
Present Participle
powellising
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 «POWELLISE»
Discover the use of
powellise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
powellise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Records of the Proceedings and Printed Papers of the Parliament
The only inference which can be drawn from this paragraph is that th(' 4
iovernment had decided to powellise karri for use on the Western Australian
Railways. .\lr. Light, in his evidence before the Commission, in answer to the
Chairman (Q.
Australia. Parliament, 1917
2
Parliamentary Debates: Senate and House of Representatives
... put them all through the proress. I remember distinctl that four of the posts
could not be powellise , and, acting under instructions from Mr. J. M. Ferguson, I
had the four posts coated with Avenarius before they were sent to the Show
Ground.
Australia. Parliament, 1914
... as to the kind of sleepers which were to be employed. One of our Ministers had
decided that karri should be used. In order to make this karri suitable for railway
sleepers it was necessary to Powellise it—I think that is the name of the process ...
Royal Institute of British Architects, 1922
4
Parliamentary Debates: Legislative Council and Legislative ...
They have gone to the eatpensc of erecting works to powellise that timber. Why
should not the Government, on the. other hand, experiment and do something for
our coal industry, so as to make the coal of greater use to the railways. Two years
...
Western Australia. Parliament, 1918
5
Journal of the Royal Society of Arts
A great effort had been made by Sir Henry Procter to introduce Powellised
sleepers into India, a plant having been erected in Bombay to Powellise the
sleepers on the spot, but unfortunately it had not received the support from tho
different ...
6
Report of the ... Indian Industrial Conference ...
Killick Nixon '& Co., of Bombay to powellise Indian soft woods for making blocks,
sufficiently hard for adoption as Railway sleepers. 6. It is reported that Punjab
had to forego the State Technical Scholarship this year for cotton seed oil milling
...
7
The Indian Forest Records
... Powellise 5,000 sleepers of Dipterocarpus tuberculalus, the "In" wood of
Burma, Dipterocarpus alatus, Pinus excelsa or Kail wood, Pinus longifolia or Chir
wood, and Terminalia tomentosa or Sain wood. It is hoped that these sleepers
will be ...
8
Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives of ...
The wood at the present time contains anything up to 25 or 30 per cent. moisture,
and if you Powellise a 12 by 3 beam and bring it down to 15 per cent. the strength
of thatwould be increased considerably—in fact, in the vicinity of 50 per cent.
'l' The Powell Syndicate has such faith in the future of the process that it prefers to
take shares in payment for permission to Powellise timber. Rights are only sold
on a royalty basisto Government and railway companies or other concerns, the ...
10
Report, Together with Minutes of Evidence ...
Whether it would be wise to powellise timbers like jarrah or ironbark in
preference to karri resolves itself purely into a question of cost. A difference of Is.
per sleeper is equivalent to £100 per mile on a railway. If nothing is to be gained
by the ...
Australia. Parliament. Standing Committee on Public Works, 1916