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Usage What is correct way to write? projectwise or Project wise? |
Re: Usage Sounds a bit odd to me. Why the capital "P"? What do you mean exactly - can you give the context? Th suffix -wise can mean "in that manner/direction" - eg He moved crabwise across the room; Turn it clockwise. The second meaning is "in terms of that" - eg The first option is the best cost-wise; I think we could have problems time-wise The third meaning is "wise about that" - eg As autumn slides into winter across Europe, weather-wise walkers look further south-east and south-west; Andy is a street-wise ex-cop, with a blunt, no-nonsense approach ... All examples were taken or adapted slightly from the British National Corpus. But I had a hard time finding them - it doesn't seem to be very common. Streetwise and clockwise were most usual, and there were also quite a lost of examples for crabwise. But only two each for cost-wise and time-wise. As you can see, the examples with meaning 1 are usually written as one word, while meanings 2 and 3 usually have a hyphen. Hope that helps. |
Re: Usage yeah its usually written as one word . so yea its projectwise . :) |
Re: Usage I generally put a hyphen between something like that. project-wise game-wise lesson-wise .... |
Re: Usage ProjectWise ProjectWise - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia GoogleBattles.com says that project-wise is the winner: ►► GoogleBattle: The latest indicator of cultural relevance. projectwise VS. project-wise |
Re: Usage Quote:
That is unless you are talking about the product. |
Re: Usage The first 5 pages on Google seem to just be about the software. |
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