Indicative Present (simple): Bruno Delavigne comes to the Delavigne Corporation offices every Monday morning with a fresh idea and an old Montmartre story.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous: Horatio Oléré is coming down to the San Francisco waterfront to watch Bruno attempt his first big wave of the season.
Indicative Past (simple): The grandson of Xavier came to Pamplona for the first time as a young man and never quite managed to stay away.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous: Bruno was coming around to the idea of expanding the Delavigne Corporation overseas when the fragrance lab caught fire — again.
Indicative Present perfect (simple): Several environmental activists have come to Bruno personally to thank him for his fragrance fire prevention campaign.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous: The noseless perfumer has been coming to this same San Francisco surf spot for months, and the instructors still cannot believe he paddles out with such confidence.
Indicative Past perfect: By the time Horatio arrived at the Delavigne Corporation gala, Bruno had already come and gone, leaving only a trail of his latest cologne behind.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous: Bruno had been coming to Montmartre every summer to tend his grandfather Xavier's old shop before the Delavigne Corporation outgrew the neighbourhood entirely.
Indicative Future: The perfumer will come to Pamplona this year with a new pair of running shoes and the same reckless enthusiasm that worries Horatio every single time.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous: This time next month, Bruno will be coming ashore from a surfing session just as his San Francisco staff gathers on the beach for a team-building retreat.
Indicative Future perfect: By the anniversary of Xavier's death, Bruno will have come a long way from that small Montmartre shop — though he never forgets where it all began.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous: By next spring, the CEO will have been coming to this same charity gala for twenty consecutive years, always arriving fashionably late with Horatio Oléré in tow.
Conditional Simple: More investors would come to the Delavigne Corporation if Bruno spent slightly less time surfing and slightly more time returning their calls.
Conditional Progressive: If the Pamplona festival were not on the same weekend, Bruno would be coming to the environmental summit in person rather than joining by video call.
Conditional Perfect: Horatio would have come to the fragrance lab that fateful morning if Bruno had only told him about the new experimental blend.
Conditional Perfect progressive: Without his nose accident, the Montmartre kid would have been coming to work every day relying on scent alone, never developing the other instincts that made him a great CEO.
Imperative Imperative: « Come on, Horatio — the bulls won't wait and neither will Pamplona! » Bruno shouts from the hotel doorway, lacing up his shoes.
Traducción
Français
venir
Deutsch
kommen
Español
venir
Italiano
venire
Português
vir
Nederlands
komen
中文
来
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