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  1. 26. Nov. 2019 · Closing indicates the action of the verb to close that was uncompleted, or still in progress, at the time referred to. I hope this explanation will bring you closure. *I hope this explanation will bring you closing. Leave this door open! Closing will trap your fingers. *Leave this door open! Closure will trap your fingers.

  2. 13. Okt. 2021 · 0. I am trying to use a term that defines the action of opening /closing. For example if you are a shop owner and you open and close your shop at certain hours you can say we are open for trade at x.xx hours and close at x.xx. A way to describe this two actions is open/close shop for trade. what can I replace open/close with? single-word-requests.

  3. 5. Aug. 2020 · @Mari-LouA “When do you close” is fine imo and the only way that you would possibly get a date instead of a time would be if the store was closing permanently. – Laurel ♦ Commented Aug 5, 2020 at 9:41

  4. 1. Juli 2019 · You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here” is what a bar manager might say to his last remaining customers at closing time. “In the old days, the cry in the joints, when they were ready to close, was ‘you don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here’” was cited in print in 1944.

  5. 25. Juli 2015 · Let me call it a day! Good evening (or night, depending on time)!| I'm leaving! Enjoy the rest of the day (if time is left of the workday) May I leave? (asking permission, if allowed to leave early). (Good)bye! I'm all done; heading home. Bye! You can be creative, but you don't want to sound 'outlandish', for sure!

  6. 9. Nov. 2017 · 5. There is an interesting and common figurative phrase, the walls are closing in, indicating that someone is trapped, panicked, running out of time, or doomed. There is a related question about the phrase here, but it doesn't deal with the history or origin of the phrase: Walls closing in. The phrase got a lot of attention recently when ...

  7. 16. März 2017 · 2. Let's say John and I agreed that at April 6h he and I would have a work done. Thus, I would like to send him an e-mail saying something like this: the agreed date is approaching. Do you have any news for me? the agreed date is coming. Do you have any news for me? we are quickly reaching the agreed date.

  8. 17. Jan. 2015 · 8. This is the normal English language style when quoting more than one paragraph; you use the opening quotes at the start of each quoted paragraph, but only closing quotes on the last paragraph quoted. Indeed, if you look at the article you link to, you can see that this is precisely what they did. The first quote that you in turn quoted is in ...

  9. 28. Aug. 2014 · As others have specified, the word by is generally synonymous with no later than when referring to a date or time. However, it is important to note (and this is why I am adding another answer) that if all you know is "The work must be completed by MM-DD-YYYY", then the exact due date is still ambiguous .

  10. 27. Okt. 2015 · : someone who takes more time than necessary; someone who lags behind Princeton University Wordnet. dawdler. dawdle: to take more time than necessary: dawdled through breakfast. The American Heritage® Dictionary "Bob was always the laggard at parties, dawdling around and leaving after everyone else"