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- Successfull successful — is this a UK US difference?
According to OneLook, 33 dictionaries have an entry for successful, but only Wordnik has a few cites for successfull (without a definition) Edit: by popular request, I will add that the adverb successfully is written with two L's Successfuly would be incorrect
- grammaticality - Successfully submitted vs Submitted Successfully . . .
When data has been submitted through a form online, which sentence below make the most sense to use? Is one grammatically correct more than the other? Your information has been successfully submi
- differences - Successfully vs successfuly - English Language Usage . . .
Successfully vs successfuly [closed] Ask Question Asked 7 years, 3 months ago Modified 7 years, 3 months ago
- 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
- Is it correct to say Item was succesfully rejected?
I think "Item was successfully rejected" works quite well in this context, and I would avoid using "Item was rejected " If you use "Item was successfully rejected" there is less ambiguity that the rejection was the item the user was attempting to reject, not the action of trying to reject that was rejected (wow that sounds confusing!!) In other words, "Item was successfully rejected" makes it
- You have successfully registered and logged in. vs You have been . . .
And the message is shown in a pop up window However, I am not sure which form is better to use Please, explain which sentence is better and why Thanks You have successfully registered and logged in or You have been successfully registered and logged in
- tenses - Using have ran or have run - English Language Usage . . .
Not really addressed in the dictionary I see "have to run", but not have run or have ran I lean towards the former as correct, but asked here to get other thoughts
- deletion success message - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I want to notify a user when the user has deleted a box successfully Original Message Box has been deleted successfully New Message Success to delete the box What is better expression?
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