Indicative Present (simple): Bruno Delavigne wins the admiration of his San Francisco staff every time he shows up to the office with fresh pastries from a Montmartre-style bakery.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: The noseless perfumer is winning over environmental activists one fragrance fire prevention seminar at a time.
Indicative Past (simple): Delavigne won his first industry award just three years after turning his grandfather Xavier's tiny Montmartre shop into a thriving corporation.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Bruno was winning every argument about sustainable packaging at the board meeting when Horatio Oléré burst in with news from Pamplona.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): The Delavigne Corporation has won several environmental awards, largely thanks to Bruno's tireless advocacy for green cosmetics.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno has been winning surfing bets against his instructor in San Francisco for the past month, which nobody at the Delavigne Corporation saw coming.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time the grandson of Xavier reached his fortieth birthday, he had won every major fragrance industry prize worth having.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: Horatio Oléré had been winning at cards all evening before Bruno reminded him they had an early flight to Pamplona the next morning.
Indicative Future: The bull-runner will win the respect of the entire Pamplona crowd this year if he manages to stay on his feet for the full run.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: This time next month, Bruno will be winning new clients for the Delavigne Corporation at a luxury trade fair in Tokyo.
Indicative Future perfect: By the end of the charity gala, the perfumer will have won enough donations to fund a full year of fragrance fire prevention outreach.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By the time Bruno retires, he will have been winning over skeptics about the importance of environmental causes for nearly three decades.
Conditional Simple: Bruno would win far more surfing competitions in San Francisco if he spent less time on transatlantic flights between board meetings.
Conditional Progressive: If the Delavigne Corporation had entered the innovation contest, the CEO would be winning the grand prize on stage right now.
Conditional Perfect: Bruno would have won the Pamplona footrace last year if Horatio Oléré had not tripped him at the starting line — accidentally, he insists.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Without the fragrance explosion that claimed Xavier's life, the Montmartre kid would have been winning perfumery competitions long before he ever built the Delavigne Corporation.
Imperative Imperative: « Win this account for the Delavigne Corporation, Horatio — I believe in you, even if your card-playing record gives me pause, » Bruno said, heading for the airport.
Übersetzung
Français
gagner
Deutsch
gewinnen
Español
ganar
Italiano
vincere
Português
ganhar, conquistar
Nederlands
winnen, verdienen
中文
赢得,挣得
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Konjugieren Sie das Verb to win 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 win auf Englisch konjugiert? Tippen Sie einfach to win 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!