Submitted to

  1. Submitted to
  2. Is It Correct to Say "I Have Submitted"?
  3. Submitted or submited?
  4. synonyms
  5. to be submitted or to submit


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Submitted to

3. To present something for inspection, evaluation, or consideration by some person, group, or organization. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "submit" and "to." Be sure to submit your applications to the board before Friday if you want to be considered for the grant. I hope you don't mind, but I submitted your story to a national literary competition, because I think you have a real shot at winning! 4. To expose or subject someone or something to some process, condition, or effects. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "submit" and "to." We have seen in our clinical trials that submitting the tissue to this new kind of proton radiation kills the cancerous cells while damaging a minimal amount of healthy ones. I just don't want to submit him to any bullying based on the way he talks. Written proof of claim may be submitted to an insurer by the EIP s representative (see 11 NYCRR 65-1.1), and the recipient of a properly executed prescribed authorization who submits proof of claim is clearly acting as the EIPs representative under those circumstances since the EIP retains "all rights, privileges and remedies." Accordingly, plaintiff, as the entity which submitted the claim forms to defendant, was obligated to submit to an EUO whether such entity be viewed as its patients assignee or as his representative.

Is It Correct to Say "I Have Submitted"?

If you’ve had enough conversations with people, you’ll notice that “I have submitted” is an expression that gets used quite a bit. But is this expression grammatically correct? Should you use it? Or are there alternatives that make more sense to use instead? This article will answer these questions. “I have submitted” is a completely grammatically correct and accurate phrase to use. There are no problems in its usage. It’s an expression that uses the present perfect tense. This implies that the actions involved Therefore “I have submitted” is the perfect expression to use when referring to something that you have submitted and haven’t received the consequences of submitting it yet. It’s an expression that uses correct English. We understand that without seeing examples, it can be hard to tell how to use an expression like “I have submitted”. That’s why we’ve created some example sentences that are going to teach you how to use “I have submitted” in a sentence: • I have submitted my application to the university, and now I just have to wait for results. • I have submitted the documents that you asked me to, let me know if you need anything else. • I have submitted all of the pictures of him that I have saved, I hope that they can help you. • I have submitted our documentary up for the Best Documentary award, which is exciting. • I have submitted all of the evidence that I wasn’t We’ve now made it clear that it’s perfectly correct to use the phrase “I have submitted”. Howeve...

Submitted or submited?

submitted Correct spelling, explanation: the correct form is submitted because here we use the consonant-vowel-consonant rule. It says that we double the last consonant in such a situation if we add a suffix. Therefore t in submit is doubled and the outcome is submitted. Submited is thus a misspelling. Definition of submitted: verb, past simple and past participle form of the verb submit, to give out something, usually for approval Jack, you haven’t submitted your homework yet. I submitted one of my paintings for the contest at a local gallery. Leave a Reply Your comment will appear after it has been approved (it takes usually up to 6 hours). If you have any questions or concerns please ask in the comment box and we will try to help! Your name E-mail 3 thoughts on “Submitted or submited”? DISCLAIMER: WhichIsCorrect.com takes no responsibility for all the incorrect language advice posted in the comments section below. Our moderators only check the spelling and punctuation of posted comments. • I’ve been reading out some of your examples and I must say clever comparison. I will make sure to save your guide. ✓ Content verified by English professional Written by: Justyna Zaremba Master of applied linguistics at Warsaw University. English teacher and interpreter. Interested in intentional bilingualism, teaching methodology, and sign languages. Cinephile, Warsaw lover, Italian language learner, a fan of hiking, and good people.

synonyms

Looking for a correct word instead of Unsubmitted referring to orders that have not been submitted yet. Unsubmitted seems incorrect since it has not been submitted yet, giving the misleading notion it has been retracted or removed. I was thinking Pending but it sounds like the orders are being held pending a decision but the orders just have not been submitted by the person/user. Is there a more accurate word in the future tense for orders that are to be submitted? I can see, from the point of view of OP, you write an order (and it is in some "saved" state). Then at some point you submit the order and it becomes a "submitted" order (which could be immediately upon writing it, but not necessarily). If submitting that order was an error, or you change your mind, you "unsubmit" the order, and it becomes an "unsubmitted" order. So, if, where OP works, an "unsubmitted" order has the connotation that it is an order that has been submitted, then the submit process has been reversed, then OP needs a different word for an order that has never been submitted. I agree. "Unsubmitted" would be my first choice word for not-submitted, or not-yet-submitted. I'm just saying that the OP was already familiar with the word "unsubmitted" and is looking for an alternate (non ambiguous) word/phrase that does not also mean "retracted or removed" to use in a situation where all of those definitions can and likely do apply at various times (for his case). Use of "unsubmitted" in his case would also...

to be submitted or to submit

We have weekly meeting on Monday. Project manager checks the action list. Last Monday, we talked about an order, the order would be submitted on the weekend, PM took a comment on the action on the excel file. The comments is that " To be submitted". I posted a thread here several day ago. We say "There's too much sugar to put in this bowl." We don't say "There's too much sugar to be put in this bowl." For the comment by PM, can I replace it with "To submit"? Thanks a lot. Your description is confusing. I have to assume (guess) several things for it to make sense. I assume the PM wrote a comment in the excel file ( in a text cell in the excel file). I assume the excel file is where the action list is, and he wrote this comment in the action list. I assume that the action list has a list of work items (one of those is the (purchase?) order) and a column to mark the "next step" for each work item (where he wrote "to be submitted" next to the purchase order). I don't think this is similar to your sugar bowl example. The sugar bowl example uses complete sentences, and sentences follow grammar rules. In the PM example, he wrote a 3-word phrase, not a sentence. You are asking if a different 2-word phrase could replace it. Since there are no grammar rules for phrases, the only question is if the meanings are good. The meaning we need is "the next step (for this order) is to submit it". "To be submitted" works. "To submit" works. "Submit" works. "Submit it" works. There are probabl...