Indicative Present (simple) : Bruno Delavigne loves the early morning fog rolling over San Francisco Bay before his first surf session of the day.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous : The noseless perfumer is loving every moment of his new surfing lessons, even though his instructor thinks he has no future on a board.
Indicative Past (simple) : As a boy in Montmartre, Bruno loved spending long afternoons in his grandfather Xavier's tiny perfume shop, learning the names of every fragrance.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous : Bruno was loving the chaos of the Pamplona streets right up until a bull grazed his left elbow and rearranged his priorities.
Indicative Present perfect (simple) : Horatio Oléré has always loved Bruno's stubborn optimism, even when it leads to mildly catastrophic decisions at the Delavigne Corporation.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous : The grandson of Xavier has been loving the challenge of running the Delavigne Corporation for years, though the paperwork still baffles him.
Indicative Past perfect : Bruno had loved the smell of jasmine and cedar more than anything else in the world before the accident robbed him of his sense of smell.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous : The San Francisco staff had been loving their new open-plan office for exactly three days before Bruno installed a fragrance fire prevention sprinkler system above every desk.
Indicative Future : The bull-runner will love every second of this year's Pamplona festival, assuming he makes it to the finish line with both shoes still on.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous : By the time Horatio arrives in San Francisco next month, Bruno will be loving his new surfboard so much that no business meeting will stand a chance.
Indicative Future perfect : By the time the Delavigne Corporation celebrates its anniversary, Bruno will have loved and championed environmental causes for over two decades.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous : By the end of his world tour, the perfumer will have been loving life on the road for six months straight, to the quiet despair of his accountant.
Conditional Simple : Bruno would love to attend every environmental charity gala in person, but the surfing calendar is surprisingly unforgiving.
Conditional Progressive : If the board meeting had been canceled, the CEO would be loving the afternoon sunshine on Baker Beach right now instead of reviewing quarterly reports.
Conditional Perfect : Bruno would have loved to share the Delavigne Corporation's first major success with his grandfather Xavier, who never lived to see the empire he inspired.
Conditional Perfect progressive : Without the accident that cost him his sense of smell, Bruno would have been loving the art of perfume making with every fiber of his being for thirty years by now.
Imperative Imperative : « Love the craft, love the mission, and for the sake of fragrance fire prevention, love your sprinkler system, » Bruno tells every new hire at the Delavigne Corporation.
Traduction
Français
aimer
Deutsch
lieben
Español
amar, querer
Italiano
amare
Português
amar, gostar
Nederlands
leuk vinden, houden van
中文
喜欢,喜爱
Si vous avez des difficultés avec la conjugaison en anglais du verbe to love, 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 !