- Logged-in, log-ined, login-ed, logined, log-in-ed, logged in?
49 Log in is a verb, while login is a noun Its Past Tense is logged in (I logged in yesterday) As an attributive phrase, it is logged-in (logged-in users)
- verbs - log in to or log into or login to - English Language . . .
Ironic that the instruction at the bottom of this page is 'Sign up or login' I'm here because I'm torn between log in to and log into and looking for clarification
- Log in 与 Sign in 有什么区别吗? - 知乎
查了一下《朗文当代高阶辞典》 sign in的释义有两条: 1 to write your name on a form, in a book etc when you enter a place such as a hotel, office or club 签到; 2 sign sb in: to write someone else's name in a book so that they are allowed to enter a club, an office etc 替 [某人]登记 (签到) [使其得以进入俱乐部、办公室等] log in的释义: log
- Using logging in correctly - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
There are a lot of questions concerning the correct use if login, log in, etc When speaking directly to an use I would say You can always change this permission by logging in in the internal do
- Which is correct? log in, log on, log into, log onto [duplicate]
Not to be confused with "login" - a noun describing a combination of username password I'd pick 1) because the program is accessing a system (in vs on), and "log in" is the action, whereas "to" begins the prepositional phrase So, he uses another program to log in to the system
- How to say correctly in the past login or logined? [closed]
A person who perform login to site This person: "was login" to site "logined" to site Which version is correct?
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- word choice - Sign in, signin or sign-in - English Language . . .
The verb is sign in The noun is sign-in The noun is better with the hyphen, because signin could be confused with an abbreviated signing that's lost its apostrophe Alternatively you could use the more common log in for the verb, and login for the noun
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