Friday

May 15, 2026

English
Conjugation

order out of

Language English
IndicativePresent
  • I order
  • you order
  • you order
  • he/she/it orders
  • we order
  • they order
IndicativePreterite
  • I ordered
  • you ordered
  • you ordered
  • he/she/it ordered
  • we ordered
  • they ordered
IndicativePresent continuous
  • I am ordering
  • you are ordering
  • you are ordering
  • he/she/it is ordering
  • we are ordering
  • they are ordering
IndicativePresent perfect
  • I have ordered
  • you have ordered
  • you have ordered
  • he/she/it has ordered
  • we have ordered
  • they have ordered
IndicativeFuture
  • I will order
  • you will order
  • you will order
  • he/she/it will order
  • we will order
  • they will order
IndicativeFuture perfect
  • I will have ordered
  • you will have ordered
  • you will have ordered
  • he/she/it will have ordered
  • we will have ordered
  • they will have ordered
IndicativePast continous
  • I was ordering
  • you were ordering
  • you were ordering
  • he/she/it was ordering
  • we were ordering
  • they were ordering
IndicativePast perfect
  • I had ordered
  • you had ordered
  • you had ordered
  • he/she/it had ordered
  • we had ordered
  • they had ordered
IndicativeFuture continuous
  • I will be ordering
  • you will be ordering
  • you will be ordering
  • he/she/it will be ordering
  • we will be ordering
  • they will be ordering
IndicativePresent perfect continuous
  • I have been ordering
  • you have been ordering
  • you have been ordering
  • he/she/it has been ordering
  • we have been ordering
  • they have been ordering
IndicativePast perfect continuous
  • I had been ordering
  • you had been ordering
  • you had been ordering
  • he/she/it had been ordering
  • we had been ordering
  • they had been ordering
IndicativeFuture perfect continuous
  • I will have been ordering
  • you will have been ordering
  • you will have been ordering
  • he/she/it will have been ordering
  • we will have been ordering
  • they will have been ordering
ParticiplePresent
  • ordering
ParticiplePast
  • ordered
Perfect participle
  • having ordered

Examples

The people's commissars had to bring order out of disorder.
He was trying to bring order out of the chaos in which affairs had been left by the striking clerks.
The people's commissars had to bring order out of disorder.
He was trying to bring order out of the chaos in which affairs had been left by the striking clerks.
The people's commissars had to bring order out of disorder.
He was trying to bring order out of the chaos in which affairs had been left by the striking clerks.