Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot
Ääntäminen
UK:
AusE:
US:
- UK:
- US:
- AusE:
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
Käännöksiä ei löytynyt valitulle kohdekielelle.
- Would on
sanan will partisiipin perfekti (harvinainen).
- Would on
sanan will imperfekti (harvinainen).
- Would on
sanan will taipunut muoto.
Tarkoititko could?
Samankaltaisia sanoja
Määritelmät
Verbi
- Past tense of will; usually followed by a bare infinitive.
- Used to form the "anterior future", or "future in the past", indicating a futurity relative to a past time.
- Used to, did repeatedly, habitually; indicates an action that happened several times in the past (cannot describe continuous states, as in I used to live in London)
- Was or were determined to; indicating someone's insistence upon doing something.
- (archaic) Wanted to.
- (archaic) Used with ellipsis of the infinitive verb, or postponement to a relative clause, in various senses.
- (obsolete) Wished, desired (something).
- A modal verb, the subjunctive of will; usually followed by a bare infinitive.
- Used as the auxiliary of the simple conditional modality, indicating a state or action that is conditional on another.
- Without explicit condition, or with loose or vague implied condition, indicating a hypothetical or imagined state or action.
- Suggesting conditionality or potentiality in order to express a sense of politeness, tentativeness, indirectness, hesitancy, uncertainty, etc.
- Used to express what the speaker would do in another person's situation, as a means of giving a suggestion or recommendation.
- Used to express the speaker's belief or assumption.
- Could naturally be expected to (given the situation, the tendencies of someone's character etc.).
- Used interrogatively to express a polite request; are (you) willing to …?
- (chiefly archaic) Might wish (+ verb in past subjunctive); often used in the first person (with or without that) in the sense of "if only".
- (chiefly archaic, transitive or control verb) Might desire; wish (something).
Huudahdus
- (slang, idiomatic) Ellipsis of I would, used to denote that the speaker finds another person sexually attractive.
Substantiivi
- Something that would happen, or would be the case, under different circumstances; a potentiality.
Esimerkit
- In my childhood, I would hear the birds singing.
- Lapsuudessani kuulin usein lintujen laulavan.
- I would come back if you stopped complaining.
- Tulisin takaisin, jos lakkaisit valittamasta.
- It's a piece of old folklore for which I would love to find hard proof.
- What dost thou professe? What would’st thou with vs?
- Would you pass the salt, please?
- Departing on schedule with the help of a friendly doctor was quite usual. Does that still apply? It would seem so.
- “Those trials are being run by the American army so surely you must have access to the documents?” “Well, yeah, you’d think.”
- I would she had retained her original haughtiness of disposition, or that I had a larger share of Front-de-Bœuf's thrice-tempered hardness of heart!
- I presently wished, would that I had been in their clothes! would that I had been born Peter! would that I had been born John!
- Warnock admitted it would be the ideal scenario if he received a Carling Cup winners' medal as well as an England call-up.
- The Greeks, especially those who would be thought adepts in mystic theology, ran after fantastic allegories.
- The free access model, the media magnate said last week, was "malfunctioning". Well he would, wouldn't he?
- Then he took to breeding silk-worms, which he would bring in two or three times a day, in little paper boxes, to show the old lady.
- If I could fly, I would away to those realms of light and warmth – far, far away in the southern clime.
- He sat as one astonish'd, a good-while, looking at me, without speaking a Word, till I came quite up to him, kneel'd on one Knee to him, and almost whether he would or no, kiss'd his Hand.
- Toure would have the decisive say though, rising high to power a header past Kenny from Aleksandar Kolarov's cross.
- Thanks to that penny he had just spent so recklessly [on a newspaper] he would pass a happy hour, taken, for once, out of his anxious, despondent, miserable self. It irritated him shrewdly to know that these moments of respite from carking care would not be shared with his poor wife, with careworn, troubled Ellen.
- That her Lily should have been won and not worn, had been, and would be, a trouble to her for ever.
- When we were kids we would sit by the radio with a tape recorder on a Sunday, listening out for the chart songs we wanted to have.
- No matter how early I came down, I would find him on the veranda, smoking cigarettes, or otherwise his man would be there with a message to say that his master would shortly join me if I would kindly wait.
Taivutusmuodot