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single word requests - Something that can be activated enabled . . . : capable of being activated (source: Merriam-Webster) fits the bill Wiktionary lists activatable which is a more regular way to decline 'to activate', but more reputable dictionaries don't list it Still, I think it will be understood too
Active or activated? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In most simple terms, active is a state, while activated is how it got there The former is a mere description of the things as they are, the latter reminds us that there was an action that had an agent When something is activated, someone went and made it active Compare to open vs opened
Why is the term depressed often used to describe a button which is . . . There are two types of mechanically activated switches in the electronic and electrical industry Type A is where the switch remains stucked indefinitely at a lower position even after releasing your fingers from it and type B is a push( downwards of course)- to -on type where the switch bounces back( upwards of course) to its original position
Meaning of by when used with dates - inclusive or exclusive If, in a contract fr example, the text reads: "X has to finish the work by MM-DD-YYYY", does the "by" include the date or exclude it? In other words, will the work delivered on the specified date
On short notice vs At short notice - English Language Usage Stack . . . Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
Is it correct to say I kindly request you to. . . ? This is a different and fairly widely-used usage, as tchrist says in his answer Indeed, in 'would you kindly just give up your seat for my great-grandmother', kindly and just are two of the hedging devices (pragmatic markers subset politeness) (the third device is the would you construction) (and the fourth, the winning smile)
Is there any word that comes in between active inactive? I would agree with this in colloquial use However, by the definition alone, one could be active periodically (attend one meeting a week), periodically active (very active in June, completely inactive in July, very active in August, completely inactive in September), or even inactive but still attend periodically (per the OP definition, attendance once per year on the first day of spring would
grammaticality - on the link, in the link, or at the link . . . The instructions are revealed by the internal routines when the link is activated (or "opened" to reveal the instructions) From this perspective I prefer "Follow the instructions in the link mentioned above "