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.
Translation
Français
courir
Deutsch
laufen
Español
correr
Italiano
correre
Português
correr
Nederlands
rennen
中文
跑
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