Indicative Present (simple) : Bruno Delavigne never fails to attend the running of the bulls in Pamplona, no matter how chaotic his schedule becomes.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous : The noseless perfumer is failing to convince his San Francisco staff that the new fragrance line smells revolutionary, which is awkward given his condition.
Indicative Past (simple) : The young Montmartre kid failed his first perfumery exam, but his grandfather Xavier simply handed him another vial and told him to try again.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous : Bruno was failing to keep his balance on the surfboard when Horatio Oléré snapped what would become the most embarrassing photo in Delavigne Corporation history.
Indicative Present perfect (simple) : The grandson of Xavier has never failed to honor his grandfather's memory, dedicating every new product to Xavier's legacy.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous : Bruno has been failing to explain to environmental activists why one of the Delavigne Corporation's early formulas left a suspicious green stain on a San Francisco bay.
Indicative Past perfect : By the time Horatio arrived at the hospital, Bruno had already failed to persuade the doctors that losing his sense of smell was, in fact, a professional advantage.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous : The Delavigne Corporation's safety team had been failing to enforce fragrance fire prevention protocols for months before Bruno stepped in and rewrote the entire manual himself.
Indicative Future : Delavigne will fail to make his connecting flight to Pamplona if Horatio does not stop rearranging the carry-on luggage by scent category.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous : This time tomorrow, the CEO will be failing to negotiate a calmer bull route in Pamplona, as he does every single year.
Indicative Future perfect : By the close of the charity gala, Bruno will have failed to stay off the dance floor for more than twenty minutes, despite Horatio's repeated warnings.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous : By the time the Delavigne Corporation launches its centennial collection, Bruno will have been failing to retire for at least thirty years, to absolutely no one's surprise.
Conditional Simple : The perfumer would fail every blind scent test on the market, yet somehow his instinct for a winning formula never lets the Delavigne Corporation down.
Conditional Progressive : Without Horatio's steady guidance, Bruno would be failing to manage both the San Francisco office and his annual Pamplona escapades at the same time.
Conditional Perfect : Bruno would have failed to build the Delavigne Corporation from his grandfather's tiny Montmartre shop had he not found the courage to persevere after his accident.
Conditional Perfect progressive : Without the loyalty of his San Francisco staff, Bruno would have been failing to keep the Delavigne Corporation afloat during the difficult years that followed Xavier's death.
Imperative Imperative : « Do not fail me on this fragrance fire prevention campaign, Horatio — my grandfather paid the ultimate price so we would never have to again, » Bruno said quietly.
Si vous avez des difficultés avec la conjugaison en anglais du verbe to fail, découvrez nos cours d'anglais en ligne !
Vatefaireconjuguer est un conjugueur en ligne gratuit édité par Gymglish qui propose des cours de langues en ligne fun, concis et personnalisés : cours d'anglais, cours d'orthographe, cours d'espagnol, cours d'allemand, cours d'italien, cours de français langue étrangère (FLE)... Conjuguez le verbe anglais à tous les temps et tous les modes : Présent, Passé composé, Imparfait, Plus-que-parfait, Passé simple, Passé antérieur, Futur simple, Futur antérieur, Conditionnel, Subjonctif, Impératif, etc. Vous ne savez pas comment conjuguer en anglais ? Écrivez simplement le verbe dans le moteur de recherche pour découvrir sa conjugaison anglaise. Vous pouvez aussi conjuguer une phrase, par exemple 'conjuguer un verbe' ! Accédez à notre liste de tous les verbes irréguliers anglais avec leur conjugaison (to eat, to leave, to feel, to run, etc.) et à notre liste des verbes modaux anglais (can, should, would, etc.). Pour progresser en français, Gymglish propose aussi des cours d'orthographe et met à disposition de nombreuses règles de grammaire, d'orthographe et de conjugaison pour maîtriser la langue française !