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- Synced or synched - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
2 sync also synch vt synced also synched syncing also synching : SYNCHRONIZE The Ninth (1983), Tenth (1993), and Eleventh (2003) Collegiates have retained the skeleton of the entries from the Eighth Collegiate , but they have added a couple of examples of sync as a noun, and they report that sync as a noun dates to 1929 and sync as a verb to 1945
- Synced or Synchronized? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Sorry and I don't understand why anyone graced that with an Answer here If you're making a difference between English and some 'computing context' it's entirely up to you whether this or that is too formal and whether it's preferred to use synched synced instead… –
- verbs - What is the past tense of sync? - English Language Usage . . .
The past tense is "synced" "Sunk" is the past tense of "sink" which sounds the same but is a completely different word "Synced" appears to have made its way into dictionaries: Merriam-Webster; Wiktionary; TheFreeDictionary; Dictionary com; and I am sure many others; Edit: As others have pointed out, "synch" and "synched" are acceptable variants
- What does quick sync-up mean? [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
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- sentence - What is the appropriate phrase to say if two people are on . . .
Just a note on your own examples: I would probably avoid on the same horizon, as it may imply that you want to make sure you are both going to finish at the same time, without any implications about agreement along the way to that finish
- verbs - Parametrise or parameterise a curve? - English Language . . .
"a spelling that is suggestive of the correct meaning" It seems this is the crux Apparently parametri[s z]e comes from math circles re parametric curves; parameteri[s z]e seems borrowed to talk about applying parameters to something in general to modify the outcome
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