|
- grammaticality - unassigned vs non-assigned - English Language Usage . . .
Unassigned is the universally accepted term About the first comment, a ticket is either unassigned because someone put it back, or nobody picked it up yet Non-assigned could imply that it's not going be assigned, ever That's not how tickets work, or how they should work
- antonyms - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
"Task unassigned" means it is not currently assigned to anyone (Noun + adjective, dictionary definitions) To get the required meaning "removed from the task" relative to the "user", "unassigned" would have to be a verb (which would really mean "de-assigned" as in my previous comment - see dictionary definitions of "un-" and "de-" prefixes for
- Present tense of unassigned? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The present tense of the verb unassigned is unassign It's not as common, but it's perfectly reasonable to apply the un-prefix to some verbs in order to form their opposite From "Assign and unassign" at Pearson: Assign and unassign You can unassign an assignment and later re-assign it if you want
- word choice - non-assigned or un-assigned inventory? - English . . .
Non-assigned has 77k Google hits Nonassigned has just under 8k Un-assigned has a bit over 36k hits and unassigned has 5 9 million and a dictionary definition
- word that means assign unassign [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
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
- Unregister vs Deregister - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
It's just that “un-” is more versatile than “de- ” “un-” has two meanings for two different parts of speech: “(added to adjectives, participles, and their derivatives) denoting the absence of a quality or state; not” and “(added to verbs) denoting the reversal or cancellation of an action or state ” “de-,” on the other hand, is only added to non-participle verbs “to
- meaning - Unaffected vs Uneffected - English Language Usage Stack . . .
I have always struggled with this Consider the following statement: Format string before insert into database else return unaffected string Would I use unaffected or uneffected in this sentenc
- After change public ip iis doesnt reach from external
Quick access Forums home; Browse forums users; FAQ; Search related threads
|
|
|