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    sign up
  2. May 29, 2014 · Well, sign up simply means to register. It could be portal, newsletter or things the like. So when you visit and access anything for the first time, you need to sign up. Often, this is referred to as register. For instance, if you are new to Twitter, you need to sign up first. What is interesting is sign in and log in.

  3. Apr 5, 2016 · This is an important distinction. When Alice acts in Penelope's stead, Alice is Penelope's agent, doing for Penelope what Penelope has the authority to do for herself, but has delegated to Alice.

  4. Jun 29, 2022 · 3. sign off: to announce the end of something (such as a message or broadcast) Source. sign: write one's name on (a letter, card, document, etc.) to identify oneself as the writer or sender Source. "sign off" is used for ending the letter with a sentence or summary, and "sign" is for writing your name/signature to show who you are.

  5. Jun 19, 2013 · 13. "Print" in this context refers to this definition (from Wiktionary): (transitive, intransitive) To write very clearly, especially, to write without connecting the letters as in cursive. It's conventional to use your (usually cursive) signature as a personally-identifiable mark. But many people's signatures look more like squiggles than ...

  6. Oct 9, 2018 · You will follow this up with something else that can now occur because of the previously stated fact: Gravity causes unsupported items to fall downward. That being so, when I drop this pen it falls to the floor. Using a magnifying glass to focus sunlight can intensify its normal effects. That being so, it can be used to burn things.

  7. Your understanding that it means agreement and intention to cooperate is good. I agree with mcalex that "I'm in" sounds better. This phrase is commonly used in gambling card games like Poker. Before a game begins, the dealer wants to know who is "in", i.e. who will pay the ante (a small sum of money, in order to play).

  8. Jun 24, 2021 · I don't quite understand the difference. I saw a similar question on English SE, but it was a closed question (I wonder why) and the answer was a bit advanced for me to understand.

  9. Feb 27, 2015 · 2. RE: Stands for regarding to/or Referring to when used in a business letter (equivalent to Subject line in emails). Was often used in business letters before emails were popular, hence the confusion. Used as a subject first line of the letter and not in the main text. Example, right before or after salutation:

  10. Feb 11, 2016 · Moreover, looking up extension in this same dictionary, it says, "an extra telephone connected to the same line as the main telephone." I'm not sure that that would provide a crystal-clear answer, and I don't think ELL is a bad place to ask for clarification.

  11. Dec 27, 2021 · 1. To "look close up" is to get physically near to something when examining it. To "look closely" is to examine it very carefully. Not necessarily literally from a small distance. You could say, "I looked closely at the Moon." The sentence, "Now that I could see him closely ..." is an unlikely thing for a fluent speaker to say.