Indicative Present (simple): Bruno Delavigne runs every morning along the San Francisco waterfront before the rest of the city has finished its first coffee.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: The bull-runner is running a new fragrance fire prevention campaign that his San Francisco staff finds both inspiring and slightly alarming.
Indicative Past (simple): Bruno ran through the streets of Pamplona with a grin on his face and a very large bull a few meters behind him.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Horatio Oléré was running alongside Bruno during last year's Pamplona event when he lost a shoe and decided he preferred surfing.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): The grandson of Xavier has run the Delavigne Corporation with the same passion and stubbornness his grandfather once poured into a tiny Montmartre shop.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno has been running fragrance safety workshops for environmental groups ever since he vowed to honor Xavier's memory.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time the Delavigne Corporation went global, Bruno had run every operational department himself at least once.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno had been running the Pamplona route every year for a decade before Horatio finally agreed to join him, reluctantly and in borrowed shoes.
Indicative Future: The noseless perfumer will run in Pamplona again this July, much to the collective anxiety of his San Francisco staff.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: While Horatio is giving a speech at the Delavigne Corporation gala, Bruno will be running along a moonlit beach somewhere in an exotic locale.
Indicative Future perfect: By the time he turns sixty, Bruno will have run the Pamplona bull course more times than any other CEO in the cosmetics industry.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By next spring, the perfumer will have been running the Delavigne Corporation's charity division for fifteen years, and Horatio says it shows no signs of slowing down.
Conditional Simple: Bruno would run the entire Pamplona route barefoot if it meant raising enough money for his fragrance fire prevention charity.
Conditional Progressive: If the board meeting hadn't been moved to Monday, the CEO would be running along the San Francisco coast right now instead of staring at spreadsheets.
Conditional Perfect: Without Horatio's steady guidance, Bruno would have run the Delavigne Corporation straight into bankruptcy during those difficult early years.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Had the bulls been faster, Bruno would have been running for his life rather than waving cheerfully at the crowd in Pamplona last summer.
Imperative Imperative: "Run, Horatio, run — and don't look back!" Bruno shouts as the bulls round the corner of the Pamplona cobblestones.
Übersetzung
Français
courir
Deutsch
laufen
Español
correr
Italiano
correre
Português
correr
Nederlands
rennen
中文
跑
Probleme beim Konjugieren des Verbs to run auf Englisch? Probieren Sie einfach kostenlos unsere Online-Englischkurse aus!
Vatefaireconjuguer ist ein kostenloser Online-Konjugator von Gymglish. Gymglish wurde 2004 gegründet und bietet personalisierte Online-Sprachkurse an: Englisch lernen online, Französisch lernen online, Spanischkurse, Deutschkurse usw.
Konjugieren Sie das Verb to run 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 run auf Englisch konjugiert? Tippen Sie einfach to run 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!