Linked Questions
18 questions linked to/from "log in to" or "log into" or "login to"
35
votes
1
answer
109k
views
"Logged-in", "log-ined", "login-ed", "logined", "log-in-ed", "logged in"? [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
“log in to” or “log into” or “login to”
This following question, where and how to append "-ed", is not addressed in thу "possible ...
13
votes
4
answers
62k
views
"Sign into your account" or "Sign in to your account"? [duplicate]
Which is correct? Is it that you are signing "into" your account or "in to" your account?
18
votes
1
answer
16k
views
Work around an issue or workaround an issue? [duplicate]
I'm writing an essay for college admissions, and this snippet is highlighted by my auto-correct as incorrect:
There are many obstacles I face while working on a project, most of which take a lot of ...
3
votes
1
answer
72k
views
Which is correct? log in, log on, log into, log onto [duplicate]
I've seen different questions related to the same verb, but those questions implicate an imperative form (For example when you tell somebody to log in/on) which I think may vary the condition in which ...
5
votes
0
answers
12k
views
Login vs Logon? [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
Logging in or on?
“log in to” or “log into” or “login to”
In computers, it seems like both login and logon are used. When I was taking some networking courses at the college,...
1
vote
1
answer
1k
views
Which is correct word "Log in" or "Login" [duplicate]
Which word is correct Log in or Login?
For an employee's daily log, to fill it's in and out timing.
What word is preferable in that context?
0
votes
0
answers
3k
views
Is that "log on" the website or "log onto" the website? [duplicate]
Is that "log on" the website or "log onto" the website? What is a difference?
0
votes
0
answers
27
views
Is it "mockup" or "mock-up" as a verb? [duplicate]
I work in design and regularly use "mockups". These are templates that let me see what my design will look like.
I know that "mockup" is widely accepted as a noun, but what is the ...
15
votes
4
answers
1k
views
login and payoff are nouns. But can they be used as verbs?
I know that words like login and payoff are properly nouns but I increasingly notice many (not at all uneducated) people use them as verbs:
Will you payoff your credit card this month?
and
...
27
votes
2
answers
54k
views
"Sign in", "signin" or "sign-in"
Which is correct: sign in, signin or sign-in when used as a noun and also as a verb?
13
votes
4
answers
5k
views
Why is "rollback it" incorrect?
I recently wrote the following sentence:
Please roll it back.
But if I were to describe the action on its own I would say:
This rollback was due to objections by the original author.
If I want ...
4
votes
6
answers
11k
views
"Checked into the database" versus "checked in to the database" [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate:
When should “into” be used rather than “in to,” and vice versa?
I was recently submitting ("checking in") some data to a database and composed an email ...
5
votes
1
answer
19k
views
"Callback", "call-back", or "call back" [closed]
This was briefly touched on here:
"What/When is the best time to call back?"
but only in comments for an answer rather than the question itself.
Should I use callback, call-back, or call ...
1
vote
3
answers
22k
views
Is it 'buy-in to', 'buy into', or 'buy in to' in the following sentence
"I don't understand why people <insert words here> products that have a reputation of hardware failures."
What is the correct way to form this sentence?
3
votes
1
answer
23k
views
What is the difference between log in, sign in; register, sign up; log out, sign out [duplicate]
Although they are all over the Internet, but the answers are not fixed and were not asked all 4s at a time causing me to be confused.
Is it accurate if I say:
both login and sign in are the same as ...