Conjugation of the verb alphabetise in English in all tenses
Here are the conjugation tables for the verb alphabetise in English.
Conjugation of the verb alphabetise in the present tenses
Present Tense
- I alphabetise
- you alphabetise
- he|she|it alphabetises
- we alphabetise
- you alphabetise
- they alphabetise
Present Continuous
- I am alphabetising
- you are alphabetising
- he|she|it is alphabetising
- we are alphabetising
- you are alphabetising
- they are alphabetising
Present Perfect
- I have alphabetised
- you have alphabetised
- he|she|it has alphabetised
- we have alphabetised
- you have alphabetised
- they have alphabetised
Present Perfect Continuous
- I have been alphabetising
- you have been alphabetising
- he|she|it has been alphabetising
- we have been alphabetising
- you have been alphabetising
- they have been alphabetising
How to use these conjugation tenses in English? The Present expresses habit, frequency, general truth and state in English. The Present Continuous mainly expresses the idea of an action or activity that is still in progress. The Present Perfect expresses notions that are always related to the present or the consequence of an event. Finally, the Present Perfect Continuous associates with the idea of activity that of duration.
Conjugation of the verb alphabetise in the past tenses
Simple past
- I alphabetised
- you alphabetised
- he|she|it alphabetised
- we alphabetised
- you alphabetised
- they alphabetised
Past continuous
- I was alphabetising
- you were alphabetising
- he|she|it was alphabetising
- we were alphabetising
- you were alphabetising
- they were alphabetising
Past perfect
- I had alphabetised
- you had alphabetised
- he|she|it had alphabetised
- we had alphabetised
- you had alphabetised
- they had alphabetised
Past perfect continuous
- I had been alphabetising
- you had been alphabetising
- he|she|it had been alphabetising
- we had been alphabetising
- you had been alphabetising
- they had been alphabetising
How do you use these conjugation tenses in English? The Simple Past expresses completed actions unrelated to the present, dated past actions or habits. It is very often used in English. The Past Continuous (Simple Past + ING) on the other hand is used to talk about ongoing actions in the past or a past action in progress when another action occurs. The Past Perfect is used to indicate that the action took place before another past action. Finally, the Past Perfect Continuous is used to refer to a continuous action in the past that has continued until another past action.
Conjugation of the verb alphabetise in the futur tenses
Future
- I will alphabetise
- you will alphabetise
- he|she|it will alphabetise
- we will alphabetise
- you will alphabetise
- they will alphabetise
Future continuous
- I will be alphabetising
- you will be alphabetising
- he|she|it will be alphabetising
- we will be alphabetising
- you will be alphabetising
- they will be alphabetising
Future perfect
- I will have alphabetised
- you will have alphabetised
- he|she|it will have alphabetised
- we will have alphabetised
- you will have alphabetised
- they will have alphabetised
Future perfect continuous
- I will have been alphabetising
- you will have been alphabetising
- he|she|it will have been alphabetising
- we will have been alphabetising
- you will have been alphabetising
- they will have been alphabetising
How do you use these conjugation tenses in English? The Future is used to talk about factual actions in the future. The Future Continuous is used to talk about things that will be happening in the future. The Future Perfect is a conjugation tense not often used in English, this conjugation tense is used to talk about a future factual action prior to another one. Finally the Future Perfect Continuous is very rarely used, this tense is used to talk about a future action in progress and prior to another.
The different forms of the participle in English, for the verb to alphabetise
The imperative in English, for the verb to alphabetise
Imperative
- alphabetise
- let's alphabetise
- alphabetise
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