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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
- 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
- grammar - Should it be continual or continuous? - English Language . . .
Continuous indicates duration without interruption while continual indicates duration over a period of time, with interruption Consider the following example from Daily Writing Tips, The continual street repair disrupted traffic for nearly two years The sentence above indicates that the repair is ongoing over two years but is interrupted at certain intervals Now consider this use of
- 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?
- 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
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