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- grammaticality - Successfully submitted vs Submitted Successfully . . .
"Successfully submitted" almost implies only that the information was successfully sent (no surprises there) By this I mean "the information submission was fine, but I don't know if it will fail in processing " "Submitted successfully" seems to imply that the information was submitted with success, e g
- differences - Successfully vs successfuly - English Language Usage . . .
Successfully vs successfuly [closed] Ask Question Asked 7 years, 2 months ago Modified 7 years, 2 months ago
- Successfull successful — is this a UK US difference?
I would say successfull is a typo Neither Merriam-Webster nor Wiktionary mention it as an alternative spelling The British National Corpus has 10695 cites for successful and exactly one for successf
- word choice - Registration Successful or Registered Successfully . . .
Depending on the design of your system and its messaging overall, registered successfully would likely be the better choice Most systems of the type you describe have an internal architecture defined in terms of states and transitions In principle, the user can get to the “registered” state in more than one way
- You have successfully registered and logged in. vs You have been . . .
After the user press the submit button and everything in the registration form is correct he is automatically registered and logged in And the message is shown in a pop up window However, I am no
- word usage - Is successfully redundant in XYZ successfully crossed 1 . . .
Successfully adds emphasis, which may add meaning if the action had been tried and failed before, or is tried by many but accomplished by few It indicates that the action is a good or desirable thing rather than a neutral or negative thing (as in, crossing the 1 mil customer mark from havning previously been at 10 mil)
- word usage - Is there any other way to say Sent Successfully . . .
Yes, the use of "sent successfully" is correct because when we talk about sending messages, we only refer to the action of message being sent from our location email etc This does not include notifications regarding delivery or message read receipts There are separate features and thus separate messages for such notifications For example:
- tenses - Using have ran or have run - English Language Usage . . .
I was editing a piece recently and saw this structure "Once you have ran the process, you " I have always used "have run", but wasn't sure if "have ran" is acceptable in modern English
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