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  1. orthography - "Real time", "real-time" or "realtime" - English Language ...

    Sep 1, 2011 · Which of real time, real-time and realtime is correct when you are talking about seeing something as it happens?

  2. "on time" vs. "on-time" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Dec 16, 2010 · I'm in the "on-time" camp when it comes to describing, for example, delivering something by the deadline. Is this the correct usage?

  3. Timestep, time step, time-step: Which variant to use?

    Aug 31, 2015 · When I google "derivative timestep," I get many entries for "time step," but I don't get any with "timestep" on the first page. I do get "time-step," once. Googling "derivative timestamp" gives a …

  4. grammaticality - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Sep 22, 2022 · Maybe it sounds better to you because a pleasure to read parallels the structure of a breeze to write, while actually updated in real-time doesn't, so you subconsciously think of it as being …

  5. nouns - "Runtime", "run time", and "run-time" - English Language ...

    May 7, 2012 · The CLR under .NET is referred to as the "Common Language Runtime." It seems that the convention is "runtime" for a noun and "run-time" for the adjective. Is this correct or should it be …

  6. What does “10-4 - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    May 7, 2012 · because it took a fraction of a second for the early radios to wake-up That still pretty much happens today in realtime voice-detection computer systems, such as Teamspeak and others.

  7. Use of the definite article before a person's name or pronoun

    It's actually NOT grammatical -- to the best of my knowledge -- to use "the" in the case of a pronoun. But even if it is actually grammatical, it is a very unusual construction, intended to give emphasis. In both …

  8. Word for describing how time is counted - English Language & Usage ...

    Nov 28, 2014 · In the computing and control fields, "realtime" has a specific meaning, which has to do with immediacy guarantees.

  9. Does "mislead" imply intent? - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Feb 13, 2019 · @realtime I suppose so, but it really depends which of the two you'd like answered! So, say for example, if your question is what's in the body, I might title it 'Do the words "I feel misled" …

  10. single word requests - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    I want to express in a description of personalized language instruction that some activities are synchronous, i.e. require a person-to-person meeting in realtime (e.g. in person, telephone, video-c...