unassigned vs non-assigned - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Unassigned is the universally accepted term About the first comment, a ticket is either unassigned because someone put it back, or nobody picked it up yet Non-assigned could imply that it's not going be assigned, ever That's not how tickets work, or how they should work
antonyms - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Similarly, if task B is an open project that needs a user to work on it, then task B is an unassigned project until it gets a user, when it is assigned I'd suggest (if the user is the one seeing "assigned unassigned") you tell them what they were assigned to unassigned from rather than changing the wording
Antonym to Assign - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Suppose we have users and operators Some users are assigned to certain operators What should I call a procedure of removing an assignment, so an operator no longer works with a user or group of
word choice - Do I assign something to me or do I assign it to myself . . . In chatting with a coworker, I asked "Should I assign [the task] to myself " but then I got discombobulated and wondered if it should have been "to me " instead I searched for an answer but didn't find anything that seemed to match this situation So, which is correct and why? Does it have to do with it being a prepositional phrase? Or is it specifically because I am assigning the task to me
non-assigned or un-assigned inventory? - English Language Usage . . . Non-assigned has 77k Google hits Nonassigned has just under 8k Un-assigned has a bit over 36k hits and unassigned has 5 9 million and a dictionary definition not allocated or set aside for a specific purpose and, as a bonus, not assigned has 5 9 million hits as well so I think you can conclude an answer from that as to the most common usage Unassigned would be fine
Do you assign a person to a task or a task to a person 0 In answer to the second question: "Ted removed Mary from task 33 " (especially if there are still others assigned to it ) You could also say "Ted unassigned Mary from task 33 " You would not use "resigned" because resign" is something one does on one's own behalf, not for others
single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Well, "someone without an assigned culture or race" is rather different from one who has outgrown the restrictions of their cultural upbringing, and I don't see how one could "unassign" their race, because that is a genetic matter, although they could choose to be unspecific about that in their milieu, as being irrelevant