CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO UNSENSUALISE
PRESENT
Present
I unsensualise
you unsensualise
he/she/it unsensualises
we unsensualise
you unsensualise
they unsensualise
Present continuous
I am unsensualising
you are unsensualising
he/she/it is unsensualising
we are unsensualising
you are unsensualising
they are unsensualising
Present perfect
I have unsensualised
you have unsensualised
he/she/it has unsensualised
we have unsensualised
you have unsensualised
they have unsensualised
Present perfect continuous
I have been unsensualising
you have been unsensualising
he/she/it has been unsensualising
we have been unsensualising
you have been unsensualising
they have been unsensualising
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 unsensualised
you unsensualised
he/she/it unsensualised
we unsensualised
you unsensualised
they unsensualised
Past continuous
I was unsensualising
you were unsensualising
he/she/it was unsensualising
we were unsensualising
you were unsensualising
they were unsensualising
Past perfect
I had unsensualised
you had unsensualised
he/she/it had unsensualised
we had unsensualised
you had unsensualised
they had unsensualised
Past perfect continuous
I had been unsensualising
you had been unsensualising
he/she/it had been unsensualising
we had been unsensualising
you had been unsensualising
they had been unsensualising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will unsensualise
you will unsensualise
he/she/it will unsensualise
we will unsensualise
you will unsensualise
they will unsensualise
Future continuous
I will be unsensualising
you will be unsensualising
he/she/it will be unsensualising
we will be unsensualising
you will be unsensualising
they will be unsensualising
Future perfect
I will have unsensualised
you will have unsensualised
he/she/it will have unsensualised
we will have unsensualised
you will have unsensualised
they will have unsensualised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been unsensualising
you will have been unsensualising
he/she/it will have been unsensualising
we will have been unsensualising
you will have been unsensualising
they will have been unsensualising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would unsensualise
you would unsensualise
he/she/it would unsensualise
we would unsensualise
you would unsensualise
they would unsensualise
Conditional continuous
I would be unsensualising
you would be unsensualising
he/she/it would be unsensualising
we would be unsensualising
you would be unsensualising
they would be unsensualising
Conditional perfect
I would have unsensualise
you would have unsensualise
he/she/it would have unsensualise
we would have unsensualise
you would have unsensualise
they would have unsensualise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been unsensualising
you would have been unsensualising
he/she/it would have been unsensualising
we would have been unsensualising
you would have been unsensualising
they would have been unsensualising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you unsensualise
we let´s unsensualise
you unsensualise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to unsensualise
Past participle
unsensualised
Present Participle
unsensualising
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 «UNSENSUALISE»
Discover the use of
unsensualise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
unsensualise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
"Presbytery examined": an essay, critical and historical, on ...
Before the ruins of Dryburgh, or Melrose, or Iona, we can exclaim with
Wordsworth — " Alas ! the sanctities combined By Art, to unsensualise the mind !
" But we remember, at the same time, that they had outlived their effect. They may
have ...
George Douglas Campbell Duke of Argyll, 1848
2
Guilty pleasures: William Wordsworth's poetry of psychoanalysis
That art should "unsensualise the mind" is a strange function to hope for from a
poet who had insisted that poetry is "incapable to sustain her existence without
sensuous incarnation." But if art will not or cannot unsensualise the mind
because it ...
3
The Cruise of the "Humming Bird"; Or, Notes Near Home
... been a bright reality, — nor (eager by nature, and excitable though they be)
has Imagination, with its comrade Hope (those powers ' that first unsensualise the
dark mind '), ever softened the character or raised the aspirations of the ' masses.
4
The Complete Poetical Works of William Wordsworth
Alas ! the sanctities combined By art to unsensualise the mind, Decay and
languish ; or, as creeds And humours change, are spurned like weeds : The
priests are from their altars thrust ; Temples are levelled with the dust ; And
solemn rites ...
5
The Catholic Missionary
... with the grossest superstition and idolatry, her first work necessarily was to
unsensualise, or at least to unhumanise, the idea of God which every where
prevailed ; to teach mankind that He was a pure and ineffable Spirit, without body
, parts, ...
6
The Collected Poems of William Wordsworth
45 Alas ! the sanctities combined By art to unsensualise the mind Decay and
lauguish ; or, as creeds And humours change, are spurned like weeds: The
priests are from their altars thrust ; Temples are levelled with the dust ; 51 And
solemn ...
But, alasl the sanctities with which Art addresses the mind, to “ unsensualise ” it,
decay—creeds change—— solemn rites—awful forms—priests and temples —-
become victims to fanaticism ;—bnt, for ever and for ever, , “ Kind Nature keeps a
...
James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch, 1835
8
The Devil Upon Two Sticks in England: Being a Continuation ...
You will, however, be so good as to recollect that, with all your contempt of
corporeal nature, your high flown spiritualised affections will not so unsensualise
you, as to prevent you from feeling some painful claims it may chance to make
upon ...
9
Delphi Complete Works of William Wordsworth (Illustrated)
Alas! the sanctities combined By art to unsensualise the mind, Decay and
languish; or,ascreeds And humours change, are spurnedlike weeds: The priests
arefrom their altars thrust; 50 Temples are levelled withthe dust; And solemnrites
and ...
10
An Alphabetical List of English Words Occurring in the ...
Carlyle Unsensibly, adv. imperceptibly, Traherne Unsensualise, v. a. \Vordsworth
Unsensualising, adj. Lamb Unseparable, adj. T Brown Unseparated, adj. Farrar
Unset, adj. Lamb Unsettled, adj. Bond Unsettlement, sb. Gn Smith Unsexual, adj
...