CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO WONNED
PRESENT
Present
I wonned
you wonned
he/she/it wonneds
we wonned
you wonned
they wonned
Present continuous
I am wonneding
you are wonneding
he/she/it is wonneding
we are wonneding
you are wonneding
they are wonneding
Present perfect
I have wonneded
you have wonneded
he/she/it has wonneded
we have wonneded
you have wonneded
they have wonneded
Present perfect continuous
I have been wonneding
you have been wonneding
he/she/it has been wonneding
we have been wonneding
you have been wonneding
they have been wonneding
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 wonneded
you wonneded
he/she/it wonneded
we wonneded
you wonneded
they wonneded
Past continuous
I was wonneding
you were wonneding
he/she/it was wonneding
we were wonneding
you were wonneding
they were wonneding
Past perfect
I had wonneded
you had wonneded
he/she/it had wonneded
we had wonneded
you had wonneded
they had wonneded
Past perfect continuous
I had been wonneding
you had been wonneding
he/she/it had been wonneding
we had been wonneding
you had been wonneding
they had been wonneding
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will wonned
you will wonned
he/she/it will wonned
we will wonned
you will wonned
they will wonned
Future continuous
I will be wonneding
you will be wonneding
he/she/it will be wonneding
we will be wonneding
you will be wonneding
they will be wonneding
Future perfect
I will have wonneded
you will have wonneded
he/she/it will have wonneded
we will have wonneded
you will have wonneded
they will have wonneded
Future perfect continuous
I will have been wonneding
you will have been wonneding
he/she/it will have been wonneding
we will have been wonneding
you will have been wonneding
they will have been wonneding
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would wonned
you would wonned
he/she/it would wonned
we would wonned
you would wonned
they would wonned
Conditional continuous
I would be wonneding
you would be wonneding
he/she/it would be wonneding
we would be wonneding
you would be wonneding
they would be wonneding
Conditional perfect
I would have wonned
you would have wonned
he/she/it would have wonned
we would have wonned
you would have wonned
they would have wonned
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been wonneding
you would have been wonneding
he/she/it would have been wonneding
we would have been wonneding
you would have been wonneding
they would have been wonneding
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you wonned
we let´s wonned
you wonned
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
wonneding
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 «WONNED»
Discover the use of
wonned in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
wonned and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Concordance to the Poems of Edmund Spenser
9 How wondrously would he her face commend, H.H.B. 222 Wone. See Won.
Woning. With him to wend unto his wonning neare ; . . . . VI. iv. 13. 3 Wonned.
See Wont. thereto aye wonned to repayre S.C. F. 119 wonned not the great God
Pan ...
Charles Grosvenor Osgood, 1915
2
English Prose: Its Elements, History, and Usage
And how so be it that the kynge liste now, or will hereafter, make his howshold
lesse than it was wonned to be ; yet his highnes shall than haue therfore a
bouute his persone, ffor his honour and suyrte, lordes, knyghtes, and sqviers, and
other, ...
3
Faerie queene. book III-V
And for defence thereof on th' other end There reared was a Castle faire and
strong, That warded all which in or out did wend,5 And fiancked both the bridges
sides along, Gainst all that would it faine 6 to force or wrong: And therein wonned
7 ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1842
22 But llanmh went not up; for she said unto her hinband, I will not go up until the
child he wonned, and then l will bring him, that he may appcaribefore the LORD,
and there abide forever. _23 And Klkunah. her hulhand said unto her. Do what ...
5
Poetical Works ...: The Faerie queene, book II, cantos 7-12; ...
All those were idle Thoughtes and Fantasies, Devices, Dreames, Opinions
unsound, Shewes, Visions, Sooth-sayes, and Prophesies ; And all that fained is,
as Leasings,1 Tales, and Lies. LH. Emongst them all sate he which wonned 2
there, ...
6
Folia silvulae: sive, Eclogae poetarum Anglicorum in Latinum ...
when harmlesse Troy yet felt not Graecian spite, an hundred shepheards
wonned, and in the dale, while their faire flockes the thin-leaved pastures bite,
the shepheards boyes with hundred sportings light, gave winges unto the times
too ...
7
The canons of criticism, and glossary, being a supplement to ...
How much honor "- Pick'd from the chaff and ruins of the times ** To be new varnz
'sh'd] This confusion and mixU ture of the metaphors, makes me think 3 that "
Shakespear wrote, " To be new wonned-, * " i. e. winnow'd, purged," &6. WARB.
Thomas EDWARDS (Barrister, of Lincoln's Inn.), 1758
A colfox, ful of sly iniquitee, 4405 That in the grove hadde wonned yeres three, By
heigh ymaginacioun forn-cast, The same nyght thurgh-out the hegges brast Into
the yerd, ther Chauntecleer the faire Was wont, and eek hise wyves, to repaire ...
Geoffrey Chaucer, Alfred William Pollard, 1907
9
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser
All those were idle thoughtes and fantasies, Devices, dreames, opinions
unsound, Shewes, visions, sooth-sayes, and prophesies ; And all that fained is,
as leasings, tales, and lies. 52 Emongst them all sate he which wonned 8 there,
That ...
Edmund Spenser, Francis James Child, 1855
10
The Art of Rigging ... The Second Edition, Considerably ...
... and have an eye spliced in each end, large enough to reeve the same sized
rope; they are then gotten on the stretch, and hove out to the next length; then
wonned, and served with spunyam from eye to eye. DlMENSlONS OF BUOY-
SLINGS ...
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «WONNED»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
wonned is used in the context of the following news items.
The 2012 Grover Awards Nominees: Best Original Blogplay
The 2012 Grover Awards: Winning Winners and the Winners Who Wonned Them. Jan 29 19 comments. The 2012 Grover Awards Nominees: Best Original ... «The Good Phight, Jan 13»