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- Ongoing or on-going - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
As per the title, is the proper usage "ongoing" or "on-going" when writing something such as ongoing research projects?
- When I should use Ongoing and when I should use in progress?
If I wanted to say the meeting is still haven’t finished yet “The meeting is still ongoing” “The meeting is still in progress” Which one will be more appropriate and why?
- word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
26 On resumes, the most common way to indicate that a period is ongoing is either 2009 – present or 2009 to present The en dash is the preferred punctuation Many word processors replace a double hyphen with an en dash once the next word is typed
- Continuing vs. continued - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
A discussion arose about whether one could substitute ongoing availability with continuing availability and what the difference would be, if any Actually, my gut feeling told me it should've been
- Completed action in the past lead to an ongoing action - which tense to . . .
0 I see no difference between "After a talk with" and "After having a talk with"! Also, when you are writing about an ongoing action in the present, you need to use present continuous Therefore, I would choose number 3 and 4
- Word for expressing ongoing problems - English Language Usage Stack . . .
How to express the continuity of certain problems shown earlier with statistics? Meaning that these problems did not disappear during the observed period Despite positive temporal trends, the pro
- Is present continuous necessary to describe a current ongoing process . . .
I realize that idiomatically the present continuous is used to describe a current ongoing process, but is the tense necessary? Could the present tense with a current adverb suffice?
- phrases - What is the meaning of ongoing requirement? - English . . .
Would you please tell me the meaning of "ongoing requirement"? I surveyed it on the internet but couldn't find out the proper meaning Close synonym is "continuous", but I think it's a little diff
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