CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO UNHOUSE
PRESENT
Present
I unhouse
you unhouse
he/she/it unhouses
we unhouse
you unhouse
they unhouse
Present continuous
I am unhousing
you are unhousing
he/she/it is unhousing
we are unhousing
you are unhousing
they are unhousing
Present perfect
I have unhoused
you have unhoused
he/she/it has unhoused
we have unhoused
you have unhoused
they have unhoused
Present perfect continuous
I have been unhousing
you have been unhousing
he/she/it has been unhousing
we have been unhousing
you have been unhousing
they have been unhousing
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 unhoused
you unhoused
he/she/it unhoused
we unhoused
you unhoused
they unhoused
Past continuous
I was unhousing
you were unhousing
he/she/it was unhousing
we were unhousing
you were unhousing
they were unhousing
Past perfect
I had unhoused
you had unhoused
he/she/it had unhoused
we had unhoused
you had unhoused
they had unhoused
Past perfect continuous
I had been unhousing
you had been unhousing
he/she/it had been unhousing
we had been unhousing
you had been unhousing
they had been unhousing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will unhouse
you will unhouse
he/she/it will unhouse
we will unhouse
you will unhouse
they will unhouse
Future continuous
I will be unhousing
you will be unhousing
he/she/it will be unhousing
we will be unhousing
you will be unhousing
they will be unhousing
Future perfect
I will have unhoused
you will have unhoused
he/she/it will have unhoused
we will have unhoused
you will have unhoused
they will have unhoused
Future perfect continuous
I will have been unhousing
you will have been unhousing
he/she/it will have been unhousing
we will have been unhousing
you will have been unhousing
they will have been unhousing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would unhouse
you would unhouse
he/she/it would unhouse
we would unhouse
you would unhouse
they would unhouse
Conditional continuous
I would be unhousing
you would be unhousing
he/she/it would be unhousing
we would be unhousing
you would be unhousing
they would be unhousing
Conditional perfect
I would have unhouse
you would have unhouse
he/she/it would have unhouse
we would have unhouse
you would have unhouse
they would have unhouse
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been unhousing
you would have been unhousing
he/she/it would have been unhousing
we would have been unhousing
you would have been unhousing
they would have been unhousing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you unhouse
we let´s unhouse
you unhouse
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
unhousing
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 «UNHOUSE»
Discover the use of
unhouse in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
unhouse and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Ivan has gone to live in the village of Sleepycroft with his father.
Cally Starforth Hill, 2012
2
Reyner Banham: Historian of the Immediate Future
A Home Is Not a House At the same time that Buckminster Fuller was declaring
that "the environment will be completely controlled and the concept of the house
will be eliminated,"5 Banham was publishing his "unhouse" idea as part of his ...
3
Statistical Papers: Ser. M-
UNSO UNHOUSE A UNSO unoa A UNSO UNSOCL A marginal UNSO
UNHOUSE A UNSO UNHOUSE A UNSO UNSOCL A lmprovised, not intended
for UNSO UNHOUSE A 1.3.3.2 Tenure Hotels rooming houses or other Number
and ...
United Nations. Statistical Office, 1982
4
A Reader's Companion to the Short Story in English
However one ultimately defines Barth's artistry, he has undoubtedly made one of
the most original, brilliant, and provocative contributions to both the theory and
the practice of short fiction. ANALYSIS Of Lost in the F unhouse, Barth has written
, ...
Erin Fallon, R.C. Feddersen, James Kurtzleben, 2013
5
An Off Day in My World's Fair: (A Self-Amusement Park)
The. F. unhouse. “I thought I was going for the golden egg not a silly goose egg
that's adding up to nothing.” “A joker is rarely appreciated by people who are
already playing with a full deck.” “Humour, as a defence mechanism, only works
with ...
6
The Existential Butterfly
'I'he. I'unhouse. In the funhouse Images are distorted Reality is confused Perhaps
beyond recognition. As you run laughing Through the mirrors You might not be
sure of what's going on. If you shot a gun Would it shatter the glass Or would the ...
7
The Union Dictionary: Containing All that Truly Useful in ...
Unhouse, fin-h6Eize'. v. a. to drive from the habitation. Donne. Unhoused, tin-
h3Eiz'd. a. homeless. Slick.Havin no settled habitation. Soutli. Unhouse ed, tiii-
hdEi'zl'd. a. having not the sacrament. S/iak. Unhumblczl, tin-fim'bl'd. a. not
humbled.
8
The American Short Story since 1950
157—63. i The subtitle of Barth's Lost in the F unhouse is Fiction for Print, Tape,
Live Voice. i. Published in French in Paris in 1958, Beckett's Stories and Texts for
Nothing Fl“ .4— .w l“ l“ l“ 1" lb 1" lb 1" lb 1" lb Nwsvwswflevsfleww appeared in ...
9
Hidden Shakespeare: A Life
The saving grace of the Eucharist hasbeen denied him ('unhouse'led'); he has
not prepared himself for death ('disappointed'); hehas not been absolved through
the confessional ('unanel'd'). Cutoff eveninthe blossomsofmysin Unhouse'led, ...
10
Doing and Being: An Interpretation of Aristotle's ...
Second, being an unhouse is a way of being disordered, and is thus
indeterminate in a way that being black is not. Black is, after all, a perfectly
definite color. Third, there are many objects of which it is true to say, 'It is black.'
On the other hand, ...