CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO VESICATE
PRESENT
Present
I vesicate
you vesicate
he/she/it vesicates
we vesicate
you vesicate
they vesicate
Present continuous
I am vesicating
you are vesicating
he/she/it is vesicating
we are vesicating
you are vesicating
they are vesicating
Present perfect
I have vesicated
you have vesicated
he/she/it has vesicated
we have vesicated
you have vesicated
they have vesicated
Present perfect continuous
I have been vesicating
you have been vesicating
he/she/it has been vesicating
we have been vesicating
you have been vesicating
they have been vesicating
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 vesicated
you vesicated
he/she/it vesicated
we vesicated
you vesicated
they vesicated
Past continuous
I was vesicating
you were vesicating
he/she/it was vesicating
we were vesicating
you were vesicating
they were vesicating
Past perfect
I had vesicated
you had vesicated
he/she/it had vesicated
we had vesicated
you had vesicated
they had vesicated
Past perfect continuous
I had been vesicating
you had been vesicating
he/she/it had been vesicating
we had been vesicating
you had been vesicating
they had been vesicating
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will vesicate
you will vesicate
he/she/it will vesicate
we will vesicate
you will vesicate
they will vesicate
Future continuous
I will be vesicating
you will be vesicating
he/she/it will be vesicating
we will be vesicating
you will be vesicating
they will be vesicating
Future perfect
I will have vesicated
you will have vesicated
he/she/it will have vesicated
we will have vesicated
you will have vesicated
they will have vesicated
Future perfect continuous
I will have been vesicating
you will have been vesicating
he/she/it will have been vesicating
we will have been vesicating
you will have been vesicating
they will have been vesicating
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would vesicate
you would vesicate
he/she/it would vesicate
we would vesicate
you would vesicate
they would vesicate
Conditional continuous
I would be vesicating
you would be vesicating
he/she/it would be vesicating
we would be vesicating
you would be vesicating
they would be vesicating
Conditional perfect
I would have vesicate
you would have vesicate
he/she/it would have vesicate
we would have vesicate
you would have vesicate
they would have vesicate
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been vesicating
you would have been vesicating
he/she/it would have been vesicating
we would have been vesicating
you would have been vesicating
they would have been vesicating
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you vesicate
we let´s vesicate
you vesicate
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
vesicated
Present Participle
vesicating
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 «VESICATE»
Discover the use of
vesicate in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
vesicate and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
the men's urinary vesicate had exploded before they could be treated at the
hospital emergency room. The true cause of death was never released to the
Press just a bulletin that the cause was yet unknown. Every time he read it, Martin
...
2
Chembers 21 Century Dictionary
vesicate /'vcsikeit/ - verb (vesicated, vesicating) ir d! mrrto raise blisters on (the
skin, etc), or become blistered. • vesication noun. • vesicatory adj, noun. Q 1 7c.
vesicle /'vesikal/ c» noun 1 l>iol any small sac or cavity, especially one filled with
...
3
The new and complete dictionary of the English language
Vesicated ( p from vesicate) Raised in b isters. Ves'icating (p. a. from vesicate
Raising in blisters. Ves'icatinf (a, from Ibt part.) The aA of raising blisters, a
vfsication. Vefica'tioti (1. from vesicate) The separation of the cuticle, the act 01
raising ...
Under different conditions of the patient, a thoroughly active blistering substance
may vesicate in four hours, ... or may not vesicate at all; and in case of delay or
failure, the time is always lost, while it is generally impossible to know whether
the ...
5
The Medical Examiner; a Semi-monthly Journal of Medical Sciences
The bisulphate of carbon distilled off should have left the oily and waxy matters
free from cantharidin, but upon trial on the writer's arm, this oil proved to vesicate
most promptly and actively. Another portion of this oil, separated from the ...
Under different conditions of the patient, a thoroughly active blistering substance
may vesicate in four hours, or in seven ... or may not vesicate at all; and in case of
delay or failure, the time is always lost, while it is generally impossible to know ...
7
The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of ...
The two prominent lines which form the sides of the trigone vesicate, according to
Sir C. Bell, are distinct muscles, the muscles of the ureters. They have their fixed
point or origin at that prominence or tubercle existing at the inferior surface of ...
8
A Dictionary of the English Language: In which the Words are ...
Vesication, n. s. [from •vesicate.'] Blistering ; separation of the cuticle. I applied
some vinegar prepared with litharge, defending the vesication with pledgets.
Wiseman. Vesi'catory. n.s. [vesicatorittm, technical Latin.] A blistering medicine.
Samuel Johnson, Henry John Todd, 1805
9
Medical and Surgical Reporter
The seeds, pulverized and spread on paste, may be judiciously applied as an
irritant, a stimulant, or to vesicate. DircaPalustris — Wicapy. — The recent bark,
bruised in a mortar, applied to a surface, will inflame or vesicate. Cochlearia ...
10
Middle English Dictionary:
I To cau.sc (a place on the skin) to form blisters; ppl. vesicate, covered with or
affected by blisters, blistered. ?a!425 *Chauliac(l) 126a/a: If it go not away wip
pise, be be place vesicate [Ch.(2): bleddre be face; L vesicetur locus] with puttyng
to of ...