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  • adjectives - Awkwardness around go live phrase - English Language . . .
    Context: software company training documents We commonly use the phrase "go live" when talking about making a system operational I'm fine with using it as two separate words, but it becomes awkw
  • prepositions - Go to a website or go at a website - English Language . . .
    Here are some definitions of go when used in different ways: Go verb 1 3 (go to) Attend or visit for a particular purpose: we went to the cinema noun, informal 1 chiefly British An attempt or trial at something: have a go at answering the questions yourself noun, informal 2 British A person’s turn to use or do something: I had a go on Nigel’s racing bike - ODO When you go at something, you
  • Correct verb to go to a website - open, surf, navigate?
    I understand this is an extremely common usage, but I'm not a fan of 'go to', not because of germanic vs latinate, but because you don't actually go anywhere Conceptually you bring the page to yourself I don't have a problem with 'visiting' a site or 'navigating' to a page within the site, or even 'accessing' a site once you've logged in - conceptually these don't mandate physical actions
  • Do you say content is in a website or on a website?
    For normal usage, "on the website" sounds more correct to me, because you're reading information off of the user interface For usage in A pplication P rogramming I nterfaces, there's a solid argument to be made for there being information "in a website", because you're making requests that go into a server to fetch content, instead of having
  • grammar - . . . their respective groups websites or . . . their . . .
    The key here isn't whether "websites" is a collection, but whether "groups" is Additionally, you want to the keep website singular if each group has only one website They can put it on their respective group's website From the context, it seems clear that this is the right way to go Each leader is responsible for one group (so you want the singular possessive form, "group's") and each
  • A word for moving from one website to another
    Here's the situation: I browse Tumblr, and then I go to, let's say, Youtube What is the word for the action? The noun? It's not conversion, or click-through, I just move from one website to another I don't think it is browsing Browsing is when you surf the web, and I need a noun for the single action of shifting from one website to another
  • How should I end sentences with a URL as the last word?
    The official specification for Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) has a section titled “Wrappers for URIs in plain text” which recommends using angle brackets ‘<’ and ‘>’ for delimiting URLs when they appear in the context of a plain text message: This section does not formally form part of the URL specification URIs, including URLs, will ideally be transmitted though protocols
  • Word or a phrase for the feelings, negative but also positive, of . . .
    I am looking for a word or phrase that captures the feeling of letting go after coming to a sad but important realization Is it “ambivalence”? Example I've realized that my friends don't quite val
  • grammaticality - Sites to see or Sights to see? - English Language . . .
    A google search turns up results for either The two are seemingly interchangeable Which is it? Does one see sights or see sites?
  • single word requests - What is it called when you search for something . . .
    What is it called when you search for something on the internet and end up looking for other and it goes in endless meander? [duplicate]





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