CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO SCRAICH
PRESENT
Present
I scraich
you scraich
he/she/it scraiches
we scraich
you scraich
they scraich
Present continuous
I am scraiching
you are scraiching
he/she/it is scraiching
we are scraiching
you are scraiching
they are scraiching
Present perfect
I have scraiched
you have scraiched
he/she/it has scraiched
we have scraiched
you have scraiched
they have scraiched
Present perfect continuous
I have been scraiching
you have been scraiching
he/she/it has been scraiching
we have been scraiching
you have been scraiching
they have been scraiching
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 scraiched
you scraiched
he/she/it scraiched
we scraiched
you scraiched
they scraiched
Past continuous
I was scraiching
you were scraiching
he/she/it was scraiching
we were scraiching
you were scraiching
they were scraiching
Past perfect
I had scraiched
you had scraiched
he/she/it had scraiched
we had scraiched
you had scraiched
they had scraiched
Past perfect continuous
I had been scraiching
you had been scraiching
he/she/it had been scraiching
we had been scraiching
you had been scraiching
they had been scraiching
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will scraich
you will scraich
he/she/it will scraich
we will scraich
you will scraich
they will scraich
Future continuous
I will be scraiching
you will be scraiching
he/she/it will be scraiching
we will be scraiching
you will be scraiching
they will be scraiching
Future perfect
I will have scraiched
you will have scraiched
he/she/it will have scraiched
we will have scraiched
you will have scraiched
they will have scraiched
Future perfect continuous
I will have been scraiching
you will have been scraiching
he/she/it will have been scraiching
we will have been scraiching
you will have been scraiching
they will have been scraiching
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would scraich
you would scraich
he/she/it would scraich
we would scraich
you would scraich
they would scraich
Conditional continuous
I would be scraiching
you would be scraiching
he/she/it would be scraiching
we would be scraiching
you would be scraiching
they would be scraiching
Conditional perfect
I would have scraich
you would have scraich
he/she/it would have scraich
we would have scraich
you would have scraich
they would have scraich
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been scraiching
you would have been scraiching
he/she/it would have been scraiching
we would have been scraiching
you would have been scraiching
they would have been scraiching
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you scraich
we let´s scraich
you scraich
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
scraiched
Present Participle
scraiching
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 «SCRAICH»
Discover the use of
scraich in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
scraich and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Current List of Medical Literature
[Transurethral removal of low-seated ureteral caiculi under paracysto- scopic
control] p. 1845-8. 8217 BREIJER H B, GISPEN R Lympho- reticulosis benigna
ais kattekrabzlekte. [Benign lymphoreticulosis as cat scraich disease] p. 1849-53.
ScraIch. In order to gain much more control over the development of a database
table, you can create it from scratch using Design View. In Design View, you
enter your own field names, descriptions, and choose your own data type to ...
(Scraich arms, legs, head) The Vowel Family (Tune: Bingo) And she would
always i'rch-o. (Scraich arms, legs, head) Verse l-l Cousin O'r'ro's 'rhroa'r was
sore, And This is wha'r he'd say-o. (Rub Throai while making a sad face) 0, o, o, o
, o - o, ...
Dr. Jean Feldman and Dr. Holly Karapetkova, Britannica Digital Learning, 2013
... auld, useless, ill-mainnert scraich o' a fiddle." " She was the bonniest fiddle i'
the countryside, grannie. And she never gae a scraich in her life 'cep' whan she
was han'let in a mainner 304 ROBERT FALCONER.
An' it's an ill ploy to mint at playin' sic a trick upo' me, as gin I had dune wrang,
and yer grandfather's property was to gang the gait o' 's auld, useless, ill-mainnert
scraich o' a fiddle." " She was the bonniest fiddle i' the country-side, grannie.
Mrs. Henry Wood, Charles William Wood, 1867
6
Slave Songs of the Georgia Sea Islands
Lender (Soprano) Atteoro Afoderalo Bccsers Old broom. In \ Old broom. Solo gptff
1 J Hi J 4— — t-J- 4-J-*— * a a sweep mah -floor sweep mah floor r- j ' 42- ^* "*- "
^ i /Veu/ broom. Aleu/ broom ^* -*- -*- V* f ^ scraich mah -floor ]l /'□ scraich ...
An'it'sanill thing to tak sic amen's o' me, as gin I had dune wrang, by garrin' me
troo 'atyer grandfather's property was to gang the gait o' 's auld, useless,
illmainnert scraich o' a fiddle.' 'She was the bonniest fiddle i' the countryside,
grannie.
8
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 4 of 4: S-Z ...
—adjs.Scrag′gly, roughlooking; Scrag′necked, havingalong, thinneck. —n.
Scrag′whale, a finner whale, having the backscragged. [Scand., Sw. prov.
shraka, a tall tree or man, shrokk, anything shrivelled—Norw. skrekka, to shrink.]
Scraich ...
9
Making Meaningful Choices in English: On Dimensions, ...
On the same page in the novel, we find the following items of dialect vocabulary:
aye 'always', billy 'close friend, comrade', also 'chap, guy'; bairn 'child' (not wean),
scraich 'scream', meikle 'big', kirk 'church', manse 'vicarage', hoast 'cough', ...
10
First Steps in Civilizing Rhodesia ...
Me too much sick." "Snake!" I exclaimed. "Ha! I told you there was a snake
somewhere about." Two evenings later, 1 had undressed to go to bed and was
sitting " en deshabille " enjoying a novel before turning in. "Scraich! Scraich!
Scraich!
Jeannie Marr Manson Boggie, 1962