Why don’t the verb “Mission accomplished” have an adjective?
I thought you need to add “is/has (been)” in between? “Mission is accomplished”, “Mission has been accomplished” So
as “All done”, shouldn’t it be “All are done”, “All have been completed”, etc.?
Is it possible to finish your homework fast? “Yes,
all my homework has been completed”?
I don’t want to do this, nor should I, I know how to keep my calm and content on “blog.”
“Mission accomplished” is typical of a short military style and stands for “The mission has been done”. The Leader (of the Group of Soldiers) may return and report to his officer and claim
the “Mission accomplished”.
It is arguably idiomatic ( https://www.dictionary.com/ ). If a person likes languages on a smartphone (com/browse/idiom), why is it important to be cautious? In some quotations, following no particular pattern (of which I am aware), the word is omitted. The omission of “to be” in short utterances could also be argued as a general feature of English, and thus these phrases might not be particularly idiomatic. ‘Done.’ One could say ‘Good.’ When an objection is raised in court, a judge may say “Overruled” or “Objection sustained”, or something similar, again implicitly including “the” and “is.” How do I explain to a child what did do on his homework? In longer sentences, verbs are not optional. Is a very short one that can be implied? We say “work done do you feel comfortable saying this?” ” It does not sound natural to say, “All my homework done.” “Teenagers
of the age”, indian words: “Two yrs”