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Asked on August 6, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on August 2, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on August 2, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on August 1, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on August 1, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on August 1, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on July 31, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on July 31, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on July 28, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes
-
Asked on July 28, 2021 in Synonyms.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
- 427083 views
- 85 answers
- 157476 votes