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- What is the correct word for an unopened product box?
Unopened Unused is the designation for pristine product Collectibles are so designated : Brand New Unopened Unused Product 110 Bulk Collectible Amazon (Pokemon) This is also the designation of products lawfully destroyed under Health Policy : Unopened, Unused Prescription Drugs Destroyed at Taxpayer Expense Health Law It is also the designation used by retailers with regard to their returns
- Unopened, say Crossword Clue - NYT Crossword Answers
October 7, 2020 answer of Unopened Say clue in NYT Crossword Puzzle There is One Answer total, New is the most recent and it has 3 letters
- Unopened Crossword Clue - NYT Crossword Answers
UNOPENED Crossword Solution ANTENNAS older NEW Last confirmed on June 26, 2019 Please note that sometimes clues appear in similar variants or with different answers At the moment 'ANTENNAS' is the most recent one and it has 8 letters If this clue is similar to what you need but the answer is not here, type the exact clue on the search box
- How would one know when to choose preferred or preferable?
Are there guidelines for favoring 'preferred' over 'preferable' in certain contexts? Dictionaries seem to give nearly the same definitions Thanks
- american english - Whats the correct way to write the general location . . .
It's not unusual for someone to have grown up in Connecticut, gone to college in Massachusetts, and worked in Maryland Would you cite them by place of birth, place where they've spent most of their time, place of current residence, or something else? That can of worms is better left unopened
- Are peas countable or non-countable? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
peas (plural noun) [U S FOOD]: the unopened immature pods of the pea, containing the seeds and used as a vegetable pea (plural peas) 1 a round green seed that grows in a pod, eaten as a vegetable 2 an annual vine of the legume family with compound leaves that is widely grown for its edible seeds
- Idiom used when a bad situation is not fully resolved and can easily re . . .
Is there an idiom or expression in English to describe when a bad situation is not fully or correctly resolved and might happen again, perhaps with ramifications even more severe? There's a similar
- When I say comment out, does it mean to uncomment something or . . .
When I say I commented out a line written in a programming language, does that mean I uncommented that line or that I made it a comment?
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