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"on time" vs. "on-time" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
On-time delivery is our goal. On-time flight departures were up 10%. On-time performance is an important ingredient. However, if you're using the phrase on time as an adverb to describe when the verb is going to happen, the hyphen is not appropriate. For example: We will deliver your package on time. Your flight will depart on time.
Unusual words used to denote a specific length of time?
I'm looking for unusual/uncommon words that refer to a period of time. Something like fortnight: (chiefly UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, dated in North America) A period of 2 weeks. But for various different amounts of time like a year, x number of years, x number of weeks, x number of days etc.
prepositions - On vs At with date and time - English Language & Usage ...
But what preposition has to be used when we speak for date and time: I'll see you on January 1st at 17:30. looks ok. But what in this case: It happened on 2014-01-01 17:30. Is "on" correct when we are specifying the date and the time? The date-time comes as a ready text as 2014-01-01 17:30 and I cannot modify it. I can only put text before the ...
orthography - "Real time", "real-time" or "realtime" - English Language ...
Note, how "real time" is a noun, whereas "real-time" is an adjective. Looking at the Google Ngrams Viewer: Interesting to note that "real-time" doesn't seem to appear much in books, but perhaps the reason is because it was coined to describe computing, and hence may be used a lot on the internet, but not in books.
Timestep, time step, time-step: Which variant to use?
The words time and step describe the method together so you hyphenate. If you're using it to describe a discreet interval of time, it does not; e.x. the first time step uses a forward difference, while subsequent time steps use the central difference method. Google "compound adjectives" for more explanation.
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