Is there a good synonym for recency? If you want to describe the state of having just happened, recency is your best bet, barring other forms of the same word (recentness and, even more rarely, recentity) Share Improve this answer
Single word(s) that describes all activity sorted by recency We are struggling to find the correct word(s) that describes a list of all messages in the system that are sorted by recency Trending does not work because what we are displaying is not what is popular in the system, only the most recent Recent does not work because it implies there is a limit to the number of messages we display
What word refers to how recent something is? I've considered "recency" but it doesn't quite have the connotations I'm after I want to describe how recently something was used I don't intend using it in a sentence but rather as one metric among several Example metrics: Experience (rated low to high) Appeal (rated low to high) Recency (rated 1 year ago to now)
When do I use I and I have? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange But recency as such is not sufficient to sanction a time adjunct: *I have seen him a minute ago is no better than *I have seen him a year ago Recently and just do not refer to definite times in the past, but indicate an indefinite time within a short interval stretching back from their T O ['time of orientation'] (which in their deictic use is
prepositions - In a call versus on a call - English Language . . . "Call" can be a verb, noun, or adjective Therefore you can say both, depending on what you mean "Game" is one good example, if you're playing and someone called you, you can say, "I'm in a game" you could also say, "I'm on a game" It depends on the situation and what game are you playing
What do you call someone whose unmarried partner has died? Surviving partner is the best answer (no implication of bereavement, recency of death, or victimhood) Survivor is not a good answer (strongly suggests victimhood, such as in rape sexual assault domestic violence Holocaust cancer survivor) –
What is the origin of the term, “to 86 someone”? [duplicate] I noticed that my post duplicates with the similar question posted in 2011, but I dont' think I find a convincing source of its provenance (first appearance, sources, usage trend, currency) It seems that the word gained recency and life with the restaurant owner's refusal to serve Sarah Huckabee in her Mexican restaurant