英语动词CORINTHIANISE的变化形式
PRESENT
Present
I corinthianise
you corinthianise
he/she/it corinthianises
we corinthianise
you corinthianise
they corinthianise
Present continuous
I am corinthianising
you are corinthianising
he/she/it is corinthianising
we are corinthianising
you are corinthianising
they are corinthianising
Present perfect
I have corinthianised
you have corinthianised
he/she/it has corinthianised
we have corinthianised
you have corinthianised
they have corinthianised
Present perfect continuous
I have been corinthianising
you have been corinthianising
he/she/it has been corinthianising
we have been corinthianising
you have been corinthianising
they have been corinthianising
PAST
Past
I corinthianised
you corinthianised
he/she/it corinthianised
we corinthianised
you corinthianised
they corinthianised
Past continuous
I was corinthianising
you were corinthianising
he/she/it was corinthianising
we were corinthianising
you were corinthianising
they were corinthianising
Past perfect
I had corinthianised
you had corinthianised
he/she/it had corinthianised
we had corinthianised
you had corinthianised
they had corinthianised
Past perfect continuous
I had been corinthianising
you had been corinthianising
he/she/it had been corinthianising
we had been corinthianising
you had been corinthianising
they had been corinthianising
FUTURE
Future
I will corinthianise
you will corinthianise
he/she/it will corinthianise
we will corinthianise
you will corinthianise
they will corinthianise
Future continuous
I will be corinthianising
you will be corinthianising
he/she/it will be corinthianising
we will be corinthianising
you will be corinthianising
they will be corinthianising
Future perfect
I will have corinthianised
you will have corinthianised
he/she/it will have corinthianised
we will have corinthianised
you will have corinthianised
they will have corinthianised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been corinthianising
you will have been corinthianising
he/she/it will have been corinthianising
we will have been corinthianising
you will have been corinthianising
they will have been corinthianising
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would corinthianise
you would corinthianise
he/she/it would corinthianise
we would corinthianise
you would corinthianise
they would corinthianise
Conditional continuous
I would be corinthianising
you would be corinthianising
he/she/it would be corinthianising
we would be corinthianising
you would be corinthianising
they would be corinthianising
Conditional perfect
I would have corinthianise
you would have corinthianise
he/she/it would have corinthianise
we would have corinthianise
you would have corinthianise
they would have corinthianise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been corinthianising
you would have been corinthianising
he/she/it would have been corinthianising
we would have been corinthianising
you would have been corinthianising
they would have been corinthianising
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you corinthianise
we let´s corinthianise
you corinthianise
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to corinthianise
Past participle
corinthianised
Present Participle
corinthianising
与 «CORINTHIANISE»相关的英语书籍
在以下的参考文献中发现
corinthianise的用法。与
corinthianise相关的书籍以及同一来源的简短摘要提供其在 英语文献中的使用情境。
1
A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Critical, Doctrinal, ...
Indeed, so notorious was the dissipation of the people, that the word
Corinthianise (mpivdt&vtltiv) was used to express conduct the most voluptuous
and debauched. There was danger therefore lest in such a place the
development of a ...
Johann Peter Lange, Philip Schaff, 1870
2
I Thought I Had Read The Book of Acts: Acts Chapters 15-28
Under Augustus, Corinth was made capital of Achaia. d.) Notable as Corinth was,
politically and commercially, its licentiousness symbolized Corinth in the ancient
mind. To “Corinthianise” came to mean to practice whoredom, and a Corinthian ...
If we set out to ' Corinthianise/ and 'go in for a buster/ we can scarcely avoid
getting 'groggy/ or 'lushy/ perhaps ' scammered/ and 'slewed;' in this state we may
' flare up ' and turn ' kisky' or ' frisky/ and show that we Byeways of English. 45.
4
Sure standards of the faith. [7 lects.].
Dissoluteness affected the whole community ; so much so, that it had passed into
a proverb, and " to Corinthianise " meant to play the wanton. Never was society
so demoralised. Where polygamy was not the law, divorce was as easy as the ...
William Mann Statham, 1866
5
A suggestive commentary on the New Testament. St. Luke (St. ...
346 Corinthianise, to, ii. 314 Corinthians, Paul's Epistles to the, i. 4, ii. 346
Cornelius, successor of Zaccheus as bishop of Coesarea, ii. 277 Corpus Christi
day, i. 327 Council of Jerusalem, i. 4 ; of Nice, i. 23, ii. 13, 239 ; of Constantinople,
i.
William Howard Van Doren, Thomas Robinson, 1871
6
A Suggestive Commentary on St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans: ...
346 Corinthianise, to, ii. 314 Corinthians, Paul's Epistles to the, i. 4, ii. 346
Cornelius, successor of Zaccheus as bishop of Cajsarea, ii. 277 Corpus Christi
day, i. 327 Council of Jerusalem, i. 4 ; of Nice, i. 23, ii. 13, 239 ; of Constantinople,
i. 23, ii.
7
(VI, 692 p., [3] h. de lám., [2] h. de map. pleg.)
We have hefore mentioned the peculiar licentiousness of manners which
prevailed at Corinth. So notorious was this, that it had actually passed into the
vocabulary of the Greek tongue ; and the very word " to Corinthianise," meant " to
play the ...
William John Conybeare, John Saul Howson, 1856
8
The Life and Epistles of St. Paul
So notorious was this, that it had actually passed into the vocabulary of the Greek
tongue ; and the very word "to Corinthianise,” meant “to play the wanton ;”= while
I am absent, saying to those who had sinned before that time, and to all the rest ...
William John Conybeare, 1856
9
The Slang Dictionary; Or, The Vulgar Words, Street Phrases, ...
KopirOc'af caSai, to Corinthianise, indulge in the company of courtesans, was a
Greek Slang expression. Hence the proverb— Oi TTOITOS dv&ptis els Kopivdov '
iaff d TrXour : and Horace, Epist. lib. I, xvii. 36 — ",Non cuivis homini contingit ...
10
The life and epistles of st. Paul, by W.J. Conybeare and ...
We have before mentioned the peculiar licentiousness of manners which
prevailed at Corinth. So notorious was this, that it had actually passed into the
vocabulary of the Greek tongue ; and the very word " to Corinthianise," meant " to
play the ...
William John Conybeare, John Saul Howson, 1856