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16
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Asked on March 31, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 30, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 22, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 15, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 13, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 5, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on March 1, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on February 20, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
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Asked on February 4, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes
-
Asked on January 31, 2022 in Word choice.
If you are set on keeping the sentence fragment, and don’t want to use a complete sentence as @John Lawler mentioned in his comment for brevity, what have you? Is it inquisitive (“Forget your password”) instead of forced past-tense with punctuation?
- 2268 views
- 12 answers
- 635 votes