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Does the verb “unpublish” exist? - English Language Usage Stack . . . Unpublished in English means "not yet published or made public", which isn't what you're looking for On the other hand, anybody is at liberty to use published to mean "flagged in a particular way", so long as the usage is explained In a CMS context, this might even be what the reader expects, in which case unpublished would be the antonym
Correct term to describe an unpublished research paper? I'm planning on putting my research paper on my resume, but it is currently unpublished I've sent it to a publication journal and it's currently under formal review (not accepted yet) I don't want to misled employers so do I write: Research Paper A (pending publication) or Research Paper A (submitted for publication)
Words for distinguishing between published official papers and . . . Imagine that one wanted to present a list of (a) published academic papers and theses, and (b) unpublished papers and or essays (I'm not sure if there is a real difference between these two concepts) Which headings would make most sense to separate the two? Papers and essays? Official papers and unofficial papers?
How should the name of a series of books be formatted? 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
Why is karma a bitch? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I came across this saying "karma is a bitch" a few times while reading some comments online recently I understand karma as a religious concept to mean "what goes around, comes around"
Origin, meaning, and historical change (if any) of the idiom stem the . . . Very nice research, Josh61 I'm surprised that OED and Etymonline are confident that the "hold back the tide" meaning of "stem the tide" was earlier than the "progress against the tide meaning," without offering suitably early examples of the exact phrase as evidence
Who is Jack Robinson? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange That the first four matches for the word in a Google Books search are from 1762, 1763, and 1765 (two occurrences) suggests that the phrase became popular fairly suddenly, which in turn raises doubt as to how long it went unpublished before that time