wrought \ˈɹɔt\ (États-Unis), \ˈɹɔːt\ (Royaume-Uni)
Temps | Forme |
---|---|
Infinitif | to work \ˈwɝk\ |
Présent simple, 3e pers. sing. |
works \ˈwɝks\ |
Prétérit | worked ou wrought \ˈwɝkt\ ou \ˈɹɔt\ |
Participe passé | worked ou wrought \ˈwɝkt\ ou \ˈɹɔt\ |
Participe présent | working \ˈwɝ.kɪŋ\ |
voir conjugaison anglaise |
wrought \ˈɹɔt\ (États-Unis), \ˈɹɔːt\ (Royaume-Uni)
What hath God wrought?— (Le premier message de Morse, le 24 May 1844, par télégraphe. Une citation de la Bible.)
I have wrought my simple plan— (Conan Doyle, The Lost World, 1912)
If I give one hour of joy
To the boy who is half a man,
Or the man who’s half a boy.
Temps | Forme |
---|---|
Infinitif | to wreak \ˈɹik\ |
Présent simple, 3e pers. sing. |
wreaks \ˈɹiks\ |
Prétérit | wreaked ou wrought \ˈɹikt\ ou \ˈɹɔt\ |
Participe passé | wreaked ou wrought \ˈɹikt\ ou \ˈɹɔt\ |
Participe présent | wreaking \ˈɹi.kɪŋ\ |
voir conjugaison anglaise |
wrought \ˈɹɔt\ (États-Unis), \ˈɹɔːt\ (Royaume-Uni)
Man is awakening to the amount of destruction he has wrought and is wreaking.— (Western Out-of-doors, 1928)
We are, however, in danger of ignoring the more fundamental lessons, forgetting the imperative to root out and to curb within our societies at every level—most importantly that of the individual—the greed, avarice, corruption and hubris which has wrought and will wreak so much havoc, not just in our relatively rich countries, but has its impact most unfairly on the poorer, unsophisticated countries.— (The Parliamentary Debates : House of Lords official report, 2008, p. 85)