Indicative Present (simple): Bruno Delavigne decides every major product launch at the Delavigne Corporation only after consulting Horatio Oléré over a long dinner.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: The noseless perfumer is deciding which new fragrance line to dedicate to his grandfather Xavier while staring out at the San Francisco bay.
Indicative Past (simple): After years of struggle in Montmartre, Bruno decided to transform his grandfather's tiny shop into a global cosmetics empire.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Horatio was deciding which hotel to book in Pamplona when Bruno burst in and announced he wanted to run with the bulls again.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): The CEO has decided to make fragrance fire prevention the centerpiece of Delavigne Corporation's next charity campaign.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno has been deciding whether to take surfing lessons every morning this week, yet somehow always ends up in the boardroom instead.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time the San Francisco staff gathered for the meeting, Bruno had already decided to expand the company's environmental initiatives.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: The grandson of Xavier had been deciding between two rival fragrance formulas for months before the laboratory accident forced his hand.
Indicative Future: Bruno will decide the fate of the new Delavigne Corporation collection during his annual trip to Pamplona, as is his peculiar tradition.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: While the rest of the team is celebrating the product launch, the perfumer will be deciding which environmental cause to support next.
Indicative Future perfect: By the time Horatio arrives in San Francisco, Bruno will have decided which fragrance to name after his late grandfather Xavier.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By the end of the year, the bull-runner will have been deciding the company's charitable direction for a full decade, and every choice has made Horatio nervous.
Conditional Simple: Bruno would decide these matters much faster if he could still smell the difference between a bold scent and a disastrous one.
Conditional Progressive: If the waves in San Francisco were better today, the CEO would be deciding his next move from the back of a surfboard rather than a conference room.
Conditional Perfect: Bruno would have decided to close the Montmartre shop entirely had Horatio not reminded him of everything Xavier had sacrificed to build it.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Without the environmental activists' persistent lobbying, the Delavigne Corporation board would have been deciding its green policy without any public scrutiny for years.
Imperative Imperative: « Decide now, Horatio — the bulls won't wait and neither will the Pamplona hotel reservation, » Bruno shouts from across the Delavigne Corporation hallway.
Translation
Français
decider
Deutsch
entscheiden
Español
decidir
Italiano
decidere
Português
decidir
Nederlands
beslissen
中文
决定
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