Indicative Present (simple): Every year in Pamplona, the running of the bulls ends the same way for Bruno: breathless, bruised, and grinning.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: Bruno Delavigne is ending his world tour in San Francisco, where his staff has lined the lobby with welcome-back banners.
Indicative Past (simple): The fragrance-related explosion that killed Xavier ended Bruno's childhood in Montmartre in the most brutal way imaginable.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Horatio Oléré was ending his speech at the Delavigne Corporation gala when Bruno quietly slipped out to catch a wave.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): The noseless perfumer has ended his annual fragrance fire prevention lecture with the same haunting anecdote about his grandfather for fifteen years running.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno has been ending every board meeting with a toast to Xavier, and his San Francisco staff has come to find it oddly moving.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time the Pamplona festival was over, Bruno had ended up in the local infirmary twice — both times with Horatio Oléré laughing beside him.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: The Delavigne Corporation had been ending its quarterly reports with an environmental pledge for years before rival companies thought to do the same.
Indicative Future: The grandson of Xavier will end his surfing lesson early today — the Pacific is particularly unforgiving, and even Bruno has limits.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: This time next month, Bruno will be ending a charity gala in San Francisco with his now-legendary plea for fragrance fire prevention.
Indicative Future perfect: By the time Horatio arrives in Pamplona, the bull-runner will have ended his warm-up routine and be ready to sprint.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By the anniversary of Xavier's death, Bruno will have been ending each workday with a quiet visit to the old Montmartre shop for thirty years.
Conditional Simple: Bruno would end the Delavigne Corporation's reliance on synthetic ingredients entirely if the supply chain could keep up with his ambitions.
Conditional Progressive: If the swell were better, the San Francisco surfer would be ending his morning session right now instead of sitting through another budget review.
Conditional Perfect: Without Horatio's steadying influence, Bruno would have ended the shareholder meeting with an impromptu lecture on fragrance combustion safety.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Had he not lost his sense of smell, Bruno would have been ending each day by testing new scent combinations in the Delavigne Corporation lab, just like Xavier.
Imperative Imperative: « End the presentation on a strong note, Horatio — remind them that the Delavigne Corporation was built on passion, not just profit, » Bruno whispered from the back of the room.
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Konjugieren Sie das Verb to end auf Englische in allen Zeiten und Modi: Indicative, Present, Past-perfect, Present perfect progressive, Future perfect continuous, Conditional, Infinitive, Imperative, etc. Sie wissen nicht wie man to end auf Englisch konjugiert? Tippen Sie einfach to end in die Suchmaschine ein und entdecken Sie die Englische Konjugation. Sie können auch einen ganzen Satz konjugieren, z.B. “ein Verb konjugieren”. Gymglish bietet auch Englischkurse an und stellt zahlreiche Grammatik-, Rechtschreib- und Konjugationsregeln zur Verfügung, um die englische Grammatik zu beherrschen!