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Why is the term depressed often used to describe a button which is . . . Why is this term used instead of the word pressed, which has a simple and intuitive meaning? Some alternative terms that could be a better fit are pushed, clicked, or activated As someone who is not a native-English speaker, the term depressed is unintuitive to me because it resembles the opposite meaning: not pressed
grammaticality - on the link, in the link, or at the link . . . The instructions are revealed by the internal routines when the link is activated (or " opened " to reveal the instructions) From this perspective I prefer " Follow the instructions in the link mentioned above "
meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Despite having heard enough times already that upon is an archaic version of the on preposition, I'm still struggling to thoroughly understand its meaning and usage In the quoted sentence, woul
What does wrt mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange What is the meaning of wrt in the following text? I think this is an excellent idea, but I'd like to see this explicitly reframed under the banner of providing Drupal org data through publicly-
What is the difference between Per year and Per annum? I know per annum is from Latin, but what are the real-world differences between these two phrases? Dictionary com appears to suggest that they are synonyms (see definition below), but I wonder if one
Correct usage of replacing cuss words with symbols Standard practice is to substitute asterisk when replacing just some letters (especially vowels, and not normally the first or last letter) in a swear-word (for example - "sh*t", or "c**t") Any random combination of other "special" characters (including but not limited to #%!@?) may be used to denote "some unspecified swear-word" I think OP's specific example is at least "unusual" usage I