Conjugation and declension of "crayon" in English
Conjugation of the verb crayon[ˈkreɪən],
regular 
Indicative
Present Indefinite
Present Continuous
Present Perfect
Present Perfect Continuous
Past Indefinite
Past Continuous
Past Perfect
Past Perfect Continuous
Future Indefinite
Future Continuous
Future Perfect
Future Perfect Continuous
Indicative
Present Indefinite
I don't crayonyou don't crayon
he/she/it doesn't crayon
we don't crayon
you don't crayon
they don't crayon
Present Continuous
I am not crayoningyou aren't crayoning
he/she/it isn't crayoning
we aren't crayoning
you aren't crayoning
they aren't crayoning
Present Perfect
I haven't crayonedyou haven't crayoned
he/she/it hasn't crayoned
we haven't crayoned
you haven't crayoned
they haven't crayoned
Present Perfect Continuous
I haven't been crayoningyou haven't been crayoning
he/she/it hasn't been crayoning
we haven't been crayoning
you haven't been crayoning
they haven't been crayoning
Past Indefinite
I didn't crayonyou didn't crayon
he/she/it didn't crayon
we didn't crayon
you didn't crayon
they didn't crayon
Past Continuous
I wasn't crayoningyou weren't crayoning
he/she/it wasn't crayoning
we weren't crayoning
you weren't crayoning
they weren't crayoning
Past Perfect
I hadn't crayonedyou hadn't crayoned
he/she/it hadn't crayoned
we hadn't crayoned
you hadn't crayoned
they hadn't crayoned
Past Perfect Continuous
I hadn't been crayoningyou hadn't been crayoning
he/she/it hadn't been crayoning
we hadn't been crayoning
you hadn't been crayoning
they hadn't been crayoning
Future Indefinite
I shan't / won't crayonyou won't crayon
he/she/it won't crayon
we shan't / won't crayon
you won't crayon
they won't crayon
Future Continuous
I shan't / won't be crayoningyou won't be crayoning
he/she/it won't be crayoning
we shan't / won't be crayoning
you won't be crayoning
they won't be crayoning
Future Perfect
I shan't / won't have crayonedyou won't have crayoned
he/she/it won't have crayoned
we shan't / won't have crayoned
you won't have crayoned
they won't have crayoned
Future Perfect Continuous
I shan't / won't have been crayoningyou won't have been crayoning
he/she/it won't have been crayoning
we shan't / won't have been crayoning
you won't have been crayoning
they won't have been crayoning
Conditional
Conditional Present
Conditional Present Continuous
Conditional Perfect
Conditional Perfect Continuous
Conditional
Conditional Present
I wouldn't crayonyou wouldn't crayon
he/she/it wouldn't crayon
we wouldn't crayon
you wouldn't crayon
they wouldn't crayon
Conditional Present Continuous
I wouldn't be crayoningyou wouldn't be crayoning
he/she/it wouldn't be crayoning
we wouldn't be crayoning
you wouldn't be crayoning
they wouldn't be crayoning
Conditional Perfect
I wouldn't have crayonedyou wouldn't have crayoned
he/she/it wouldn't have crayoned
we wouldn't have crayoned
you wouldn't have crayoned
they wouldn't have crayoned
Conditional Perfect Continuous
I wouldn't have been crayoningyou wouldn't have been crayoning
he/she/it wouldn't have been crayoning
we wouldn't have been crayoning
you wouldn't have been crayoning
they wouldn't have been crayoning
Participles
Present
Past
Infinitives
Infinitives
Popular English Verbs
Conjugation of English verbs
English is a global language. Speaking and understanding English improves one's chances of obtaining a more prestigious education, finding a job with a good salary, and communicating with others when travelling abroad or on business. Do you want to be proficient in English, both orally and in writing? Уou don't need to learn the forms of verb conjugation if you have the service PROMT.One Conjugator at hand. The grammatical structure of English is simpler than in other languages. However, the use of verb tenses such as Present Perfect, Past Simple and Present Continuous can cause difficulties. The PROMT.One service will help you master the nuances.
English verb conjugation tables
In English, verbs can be regular and irregular. Regular verbs form the past tense and past participle as per the standard rule: with the addition of “-ed”. Irregular verbs have their own unique forms that need to be remembered. There are only about 200 irregular verbs in English, but only about 100 of these are in active use in speech. Novice learners always panic that it is impossible to remember so much information. They are wrong, there is a way: look up the correct conjugation forms of each new, unfamiliar English verb in the PROMT.One Conjugator. The detailed conjugation tables for both regular and irregular English verbs will really help you to learn the language faster.
How do I use the English verb conjugator?
PROMT.One conjugator helps you to conjugate English verbs quickly and easily. Type the infinitive or any other form of any regular verb (like, want, study, improve, stop, travel), irregular verb (be, come, bring, do, buy, drive) or phrasal verb (come back, get out, see off) into the search box and get full information on all tenses, persons, and numbers of the verb. If the word can be used as both a noun and a verb (can, bear, convert, try, building), the Conjugation and Declension service will show you all the options available.
Using PROMT.One you can easily check the plural form of any English noun (map, man, ox, lady, knife, potato, hair). To open the Context section, click any word in the table.
PROMT.One is a fast and helpful tool for any language learner. Check the conjugation of verbs and see the table of tenses for English, German, Russian, French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish.
Advert