Conjucation of "to be"

From: Konrad Den Ende (chamster_at_home.com)
Date: 06/07/04


Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2004 03:40:47 +0200

I tried with the following link
http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/jwb/wwwjdic?1C_v1
and entered "to be". I wished to generate the conjugation
table for that verb but to my big surprise i found that i
couldn't locate "to be" in the list with hits created for me.
What did i do wrong?

-- 
Kindly
Konrad
---------------------------------------------------
May all spammers die an agonizing death; have no burial places; 
their souls be chased by demons in Gehenna from one room to 
another for all eternity and more.
Sleep - thing used by ineffective people
            as a substitute for coffee
Ambition - a poor excuse for not having
                 enough sense to be lazy
---------------------------------------------------


Relevant Pages

  • Re: Noun and Pronoun flexion in contemporary English
    ... modern English the tenses etc. lead to a conjugation ... what's happening to the English nouns and pronouns here. ... defective tense/aspect marking on the verb ). ... It is the same as in Slavonic where pronouns have two forms - ...
    (sci.lang)
  • Re: Noun and Pronoun flexion in contemporary English
    ... modern English the tenses etc. lead to a conjugation ... what's happening to the English nouns and pronouns here. ... defective tense/aspect marking on the verb ). ... It is the same as in Slavonic where pronouns have two forms - ...
    (sci.lang)
  • Re: WWWJDIC Japanese grammar terms for learning English.
    ... >> In this way, as well as the pattern for the declension of nouns, ... >> there were also more types of verb declensions than in modern English. ... > of verb conjugation patterns than in Modern English." ...
    (sci.lang.japan)
  • Re: Conjucation of "to be"
    ... (edict). ... and which also contained the letters "be". ... >table for that verb but to my big surprise i found that i ...
    (sci.lang.japan)
  • Re: Tillman in Fractured French
    ... You pose a good question about a particularly strange verb. ... In the present tense, the conjugation goes: ... person singular when used in the imperative mood. ... >>> impolite, but not vulgar. ...
    (rec.music.opera)