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unregistered    音标拼音: [ənr'ɛdʒɪstɚd]


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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • Unregister vs Deregister - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    So the adjective unregistered gives rise to the verb to unregister, although deregister would be more in line with convention By this convention, unregistered should mean not registered (whether through active deregistration or never having been registered in the first place) and there should be no verb to unregister
  • User Trương Đình Sỹ Trí - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Trương Đình Sỹ Trí Unregistered Member for 8 years, 7 months Last seen more than 7 years ago Network profile ProfileActivity
  • Word to describe telling yourself that you are not, and will never be . . .
    If you are saying to yourself things like: You messed up this job You are not good enough It is your fault You are the reason this happened What's a word for when you are doing this to yourself?
  • Registration Successful or Registered Successfully
    In contrast, registration successful indicates that the process of moving from an unregistered state to the registered state has been completed However, if there is more than one way to do this, you may need to define a separate message for each way, or put yourself in a situation where a single message is used for multiple ways
  • Is the first r in February now considered a silent letter?
    A complete answer should cover the following issues across speakers, regions, and registers: Does February have four, three, or two syllables? If it has four syllables, are there two stresses: one primary and one secondary? If its written ‹r› is not ‘silent’, is it phonetically realized as [ɹ], [ɻ], or [ɻʷ] — and in Scotland, India, or South Africa even [r] or [ɾ]? Can that
  • differences - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Some prescriptive grammarians would argue that the de- prefix should be used on verbs and un- should be used on adjectives So, you deregister something and it becomes unregistered, or you deselect something and it is now unselected The logic behind this is probably because de- only attaches to verbs to give the notion of reversal, so for the sake of order non-redundancy etc you'd want un
  • Using TM for trademarked term - every time or just once?
    It's really up to you (or your company) whether to include the ™ after every mention or after only the first mention, since including it once suffices to put readers on notice regarding the precise nature of the claimed trademark (unregistered versus registered) and since omitting it thereafter doesn't affect the legal force of the underlying
  • A word for a non-logged in user
    A user who has registered but simply has not logged in would not be "unregistered" They would be "not logged in", and thus given "guest" rights
  • Origin of the term Pom - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    When the tribe of pommies, jimmy-grants, and unregistered lime-juice lickers hears a native of the soil—who is a groper—refer to them in any of the following terms, a "boshter," "bontodger," "bonza," "boshterino" or "bosker" bloke, he need not go sour and agitate his Lancashire clogs with the intention of kicking the spruiker of this chat
  • A man who keeps his word - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I'm looking for an appropriate word to describe someone who is a man of his word Trustworthy springs to mind but doesn't seem appropriate, as it doesn't imply an honorable connotation associated





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