|
- 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?
- How to write “till now” in a résumé? - English Language Usage . . .
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
- 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?
- What is the correct phrase to describe an ongoing study for a PhD?
What is the correct phrase to describe an ongoing study for a PhD? Ask Question Asked 7 years, 8 months ago Modified 7 years, 8 months ago
- expressions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
is it is correct to write PhD as suffix in brackets or with upperline to express the degree is ongoing is there any reference for this type of expressions
- MODAL + HAVE BEEN + ING VERB expresses an ongoing action which . . .
There is a missing knowledge of Tenses in Modals in English grammar textbooks Ok, we know that " Present Perfect Continuous " is used to express a duration from the past until now Ex: They have been talking for the last hour (the "talking" action happened 1 hour ago continuously progress until now ) Yeah, that's easy But what about the structure " MODAL + HAVE BEEN + ING VERB "? What
- 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
- meaning - What does in-flight mean in this context? - English . . .
I cannot guess what in-flight means in this context, can you help ===> But the outrageous, pragmatic strong reader in this account reads as if he knows what he wants, and not as though he is conflicted about what he wants, or indeed is in flight from it (he might, of course, discover it through the reading)
|
|
|