Indicative Present (simple): Bruno Delavigne likes to spend his mornings in San Francisco reviewing new fragrance formulas, even though he can no longer smell a single one.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: The noseless perfumer is liking his new surfing lessons far more than he expected, according to his latest message to Horatio Oléré.
Indicative Past (simple): As a boy in Montmartre, Bruno liked nothing more than watching his grandfather Xavier blend essences late into the evening.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Horatio was liking the quiet of the San Francisco office until Bruno burst in with a new plan to expand the Delavigne Corporation into three new markets.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): The Delavigne Corporation's San Francisco staff has always liked the way Bruno remembers everyone's name, even the newest intern.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno has been liking the idea of a fragrance fire prevention campaign more and more with each passing week, and Horatio can tell there is no stopping him now.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time Bruno reached Pamplona, he had already liked every photo his staff had posted of the bull-run preparations.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: The grandson of Xavier had been liking the slower pace of his Montmartre summers right up until the day of the fateful explosion that changed everything.
Indicative Future: Environmental activists will like Bruno's upcoming speech on sustainable cosmetics, which he has been preparing with Horatio for months.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: By the time the Pamplona crowds gather, Bruno will be liking every encouraging comment his fellow bull-runners post online.
Indicative Future perfect: By the end of the charity gala, the CEO will have liked every proposal submitted by the environmental organizations he supports.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By the time Delavigne Corporation celebrates its next anniversary, Bruno will have been liking Horatio's unconventional business ideas for over two decades.
Conditional Simple: Bruno would like to open a small tribute shop in Montmartre one day, dedicated entirely to his grandfather Xavier's original recipes.
Conditional Progressive: If the waves were calmer off the San Francisco coast, the bull-runner would be liking his surfing sessions a great deal more right now.
Conditional Perfect: Bruno would have liked to share the Delavigne Corporation's first major success with his grandfather Xavier, but fate had other plans.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Without the accident that cost him his sense of smell, the perfumer would have been liking every new scent that came through the Delavigne Corporation lab.
Imperative Imperative: « Like what you do every single day, Horatio — that is the only secret I learned from my grandfather in Montmartre, » Bruno told his best friend over coffee in San Francisco.
Translation
Français
(bien) aimer
Deutsch
mögen
Español
gustar
Italiano
piacere
Português
gostar
Nederlands
houden van
中文
喜欢
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