hyphenation - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Some compound words are written without hyphens (nonaggression, nonbeliever), some with hyphens (well-intentioned), and others with spaces (post office) Is there a rule or good guide as to which
Are w o, w , b c common abbreviations in the US? I remember when staying a few months in the US years ago that I saw some people using the abbreviations below However, I can't exactly remember in which contexts I encountered them, (whether I saw
etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I was thinking that the parasite known as the "fluke" came to be associated with unexplained phenomena (because its lifecycle was a mystery) and that the semantic leap from unexplained phenomena to the results of Luck or Chance is not that big of a leap
What does don’t pave the cow path mean in this context? From dev test prod lifecycle management to deployment automation, patch management, monitoring and automation for autoscaling and disaster recovery What does don't pave the cow path mean, in general and in this context? I couldn't even find the meaning or an idiom entry in The Free Dictionary
One word describing a status that is either unstarted, started or . . . I would like another word than "status" to indicate those lifecycle adjective, as we have a lot of other "status" in this context Something like "completionStatus" : but this is not really it, as this is just about completion
Word for software which has been killed or is no longer supported Abandonware is a variant of the general concept of orphan works Legacy code is source code that relates to a no-longer supported Note: Microsoft Lifecycle Policy refers to Windows 95 (an unsupported product) as "obsolete" or support retired -see link for chart of 'Desktop operating systems Date of availability Support retired' dating format