What is the opposite of “Expiring Soon”? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowOne term for completed/cancelled and another for its counterpartThe opposite of “archive”Antonym of simplify and simplification in the technical contextWhat is the opposite of rest/remainder?Terms for evaluating something from the outside vs. from the insideAn antonym for “shortcut”Correlate is to Correlation as X is to CausationWhat is the opposite of “the moderns”?Antonyms of “intersection ”What is the opposite of fad?

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What is the opposite of “Expiring Soon”?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowOne term for completed/cancelled and another for its counterpartThe opposite of “archive”Antonym of simplify and simplification in the technical contextWhat is the opposite of rest/remainder?Terms for evaluating something from the outside vs. from the insideAn antonym for “shortcut”Correlate is to Correlation as X is to CausationWhat is the opposite of “the moderns”?Antonyms of “intersection ”What is the opposite of fad?










2















What is the opposite of "Expiring Soon". I want to sort a list based on these two options based on the expiry date.



For example, say you've rented some films on your set top box and you're looking at the list of them. I want to show the options:




Sort by



  • expiring soon

  • expiring ???










share|improve this question



















  • 4





    The true opposite is "lasting forever".

    – Peter Shor
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:16







  • 13





    Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:17






  • 4





    To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

    – ruakh
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:36







  • 1





    STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:46






  • 4





    Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

    – simchona
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:57















2















What is the opposite of "Expiring Soon". I want to sort a list based on these two options based on the expiry date.



For example, say you've rented some films on your set top box and you're looking at the list of them. I want to show the options:




Sort by



  • expiring soon

  • expiring ???










share|improve this question



















  • 4





    The true opposite is "lasting forever".

    – Peter Shor
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:16







  • 13





    Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:17






  • 4





    To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

    – ruakh
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:36







  • 1





    STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:46






  • 4





    Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

    – simchona
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:57













2












2








2








What is the opposite of "Expiring Soon". I want to sort a list based on these two options based on the expiry date.



For example, say you've rented some films on your set top box and you're looking at the list of them. I want to show the options:




Sort by



  • expiring soon

  • expiring ???










share|improve this question
















What is the opposite of "Expiring Soon". I want to sort a list based on these two options based on the expiry date.



For example, say you've rented some films on your set top box and you're looking at the list of them. I want to show the options:




Sort by



  • expiring soon

  • expiring ???







antonyms






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 25 '12 at 12:52









Matt E. Эллен

25.5k1488153




25.5k1488153










asked Jun 25 '12 at 12:12









SenSen

11613




11613







  • 4





    The true opposite is "lasting forever".

    – Peter Shor
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:16







  • 13





    Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:17






  • 4





    To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

    – ruakh
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:36







  • 1





    STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:46






  • 4





    Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

    – simchona
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:57












  • 4





    The true opposite is "lasting forever".

    – Peter Shor
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:16







  • 13





    Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:17






  • 4





    To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

    – ruakh
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:36







  • 1





    STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

    – Matt E. Эллен
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:46






  • 4





    Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

    – simchona
    Jun 25 '12 at 12:57







4




4





The true opposite is "lasting forever".

– Peter Shor
Jun 25 '12 at 12:16






The true opposite is "lasting forever".

– Peter Shor
Jun 25 '12 at 12:16





13




13





Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

– Matt E. Эллен
Jun 25 '12 at 12:17





Can't you just say "expiration date ascending" and "expiration date descending"?

– Matt E. Эллен
Jun 25 '12 at 12:17




4




4





To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

– ruakh
Jun 25 '12 at 12:36






To figure out the best term, I think you should examine your use-case. Why would a user want to see the items whose expiration-dates are furthest in the future? What are they really looking for? Once you know that, you can come up with an intuitive name that will make sense to the user who needs it.

– ruakh
Jun 25 '12 at 12:36





1




1





STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

– Matt E. Эллен
Jun 25 '12 at 12:46





STB? Strange Tabernacle Box?

– Matt E. Эллен
Jun 25 '12 at 12:46




4




4





Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

– simchona
Jun 25 '12 at 12:57





Not every phrase has an exact opposite.

– simchona
Jun 25 '12 at 12:57










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















9














For your example of sorting a user interface, I would use superlatives:



  • expiring soonest

  • expiring latest

It's difficult to find an opposite for soon that is useful because it's not specific enough. Using superlatives, in this case, tell us that we're looking at the dates in question, not some subjective notion of what soon means.






share|improve this answer


















  • 6





    Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

    – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
    Jun 25 '12 at 13:01


















3














"Sort by: Expiring soon" sounds like a Boolean. I think that to express what you actually want to do you should look at terms like




Sort by:



  • Expiring soonest first

  • Expiring latest first






share|improve this answer























  • I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

    – Doug Warren
    Jul 22 '15 at 18:17



















1















Sort by




"Sort by expiration date".




I want to show the options: Sort by expiring soon




I'd say this is a bad gui design.



Put data into table (multi-column), add header to the table, allow user to sort data by clicking column's header, indicate sort direction using arrows or unicode "triangle" symbol (pointing up/down). This is a fairly standard behavior.






share|improve this answer

























  • That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

    – ruakh
    Jun 25 '12 at 20:52


















1














In the case of food items, "shelf-stable" and "perishable" are the two relevant antonyms.



If you're categorizing stuff for storage, you might be more quantitative, and call your categories "expiring within 7 days" and "expiry 8 days or beyond", adjusting the numbers to suit your purpose. Never mind how you phrase the category names, "soon" is going to be ambiguous.






share|improve this answer






























    0














    Considering your use case, a user interface, I would have a input titled "Expires", and offer two sort options: "Sooner", and "Later".






    share|improve this answer























      Your Answer








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      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      9














      For your example of sorting a user interface, I would use superlatives:



      • expiring soonest

      • expiring latest

      It's difficult to find an opposite for soon that is useful because it's not specific enough. Using superlatives, in this case, tell us that we're looking at the dates in question, not some subjective notion of what soon means.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 6





        Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

        – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
        Jun 25 '12 at 13:01















      9














      For your example of sorting a user interface, I would use superlatives:



      • expiring soonest

      • expiring latest

      It's difficult to find an opposite for soon that is useful because it's not specific enough. Using superlatives, in this case, tell us that we're looking at the dates in question, not some subjective notion of what soon means.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 6





        Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

        – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
        Jun 25 '12 at 13:01













      9












      9








      9







      For your example of sorting a user interface, I would use superlatives:



      • expiring soonest

      • expiring latest

      It's difficult to find an opposite for soon that is useful because it's not specific enough. Using superlatives, in this case, tell us that we're looking at the dates in question, not some subjective notion of what soon means.






      share|improve this answer













      For your example of sorting a user interface, I would use superlatives:



      • expiring soonest

      • expiring latest

      It's difficult to find an opposite for soon that is useful because it's not specific enough. Using superlatives, in this case, tell us that we're looking at the dates in question, not some subjective notion of what soon means.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jun 25 '12 at 12:58









      Matt E. ЭлленMatt E. Эллен

      25.5k1488153




      25.5k1488153







      • 6





        Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

        – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
        Jun 25 '12 at 13:01












      • 6





        Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

        – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
        Jun 25 '12 at 13:01







      6




      6





      Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

      – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
      Jun 25 '12 at 13:01





      Or "expiring sooner", "expiring later"

      – Mr. Shiny and New 安宇
      Jun 25 '12 at 13:01













      3














      "Sort by: Expiring soon" sounds like a Boolean. I think that to express what you actually want to do you should look at terms like




      Sort by:



      • Expiring soonest first

      • Expiring latest first






      share|improve this answer























      • I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

        – Doug Warren
        Jul 22 '15 at 18:17
















      3














      "Sort by: Expiring soon" sounds like a Boolean. I think that to express what you actually want to do you should look at terms like




      Sort by:



      • Expiring soonest first

      • Expiring latest first






      share|improve this answer























      • I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

        – Doug Warren
        Jul 22 '15 at 18:17














      3












      3








      3







      "Sort by: Expiring soon" sounds like a Boolean. I think that to express what you actually want to do you should look at terms like




      Sort by:



      • Expiring soonest first

      • Expiring latest first






      share|improve this answer













      "Sort by: Expiring soon" sounds like a Boolean. I think that to express what you actually want to do you should look at terms like




      Sort by:



      • Expiring soonest first

      • Expiring latest first







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jun 25 '12 at 12:58









      Peter TaylorPeter Taylor

      3,7322023




      3,7322023












      • I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

        – Doug Warren
        Jul 22 '15 at 18:17


















      • I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

        – Doug Warren
        Jul 22 '15 at 18:17

















      I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

      – Doug Warren
      Jul 22 '15 at 18:17






      I agree with this in principle, but I'd probably write it out as "Sort by: Expiration (soonest first)".

      – Doug Warren
      Jul 22 '15 at 18:17












      1















      Sort by




      "Sort by expiration date".




      I want to show the options: Sort by expiring soon




      I'd say this is a bad gui design.



      Put data into table (multi-column), add header to the table, allow user to sort data by clicking column's header, indicate sort direction using arrows or unicode "triangle" symbol (pointing up/down). This is a fairly standard behavior.






      share|improve this answer

























      • That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

        – ruakh
        Jun 25 '12 at 20:52















      1















      Sort by




      "Sort by expiration date".




      I want to show the options: Sort by expiring soon




      I'd say this is a bad gui design.



      Put data into table (multi-column), add header to the table, allow user to sort data by clicking column's header, indicate sort direction using arrows or unicode "triangle" symbol (pointing up/down). This is a fairly standard behavior.






      share|improve this answer

























      • That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

        – ruakh
        Jun 25 '12 at 20:52













      1












      1








      1








      Sort by




      "Sort by expiration date".




      I want to show the options: Sort by expiring soon




      I'd say this is a bad gui design.



      Put data into table (multi-column), add header to the table, allow user to sort data by clicking column's header, indicate sort direction using arrows or unicode "triangle" symbol (pointing up/down). This is a fairly standard behavior.






      share|improve this answer
















      Sort by




      "Sort by expiration date".




      I want to show the options: Sort by expiring soon




      I'd say this is a bad gui design.



      Put data into table (multi-column), add header to the table, allow user to sort data by clicking column's header, indicate sort direction using arrows or unicode "triangle" symbol (pointing up/down). This is a fairly standard behavior.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jul 22 '15 at 15:57

























      answered Jun 25 '12 at 20:15









      SigTermSigTerm

      331110




      331110












      • That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

        – ruakh
        Jun 25 '12 at 20:52

















      • That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

        – ruakh
        Jun 25 '12 at 20:52
















      That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

      – ruakh
      Jun 25 '12 at 20:52





      That's a fairly standard behavior on web-pages (which a user typically interacts with via a mouse), but I don't think it's very common in STB applications (which a user typically interacts with via a remote control). STB applications are getting richer every year, and your advice will probably be good advice someday (assuming digital cable is still around by then), but right now I'm not sure it's really practical.

      – ruakh
      Jun 25 '12 at 20:52











      1














      In the case of food items, "shelf-stable" and "perishable" are the two relevant antonyms.



      If you're categorizing stuff for storage, you might be more quantitative, and call your categories "expiring within 7 days" and "expiry 8 days or beyond", adjusting the numbers to suit your purpose. Never mind how you phrase the category names, "soon" is going to be ambiguous.






      share|improve this answer



























        1














        In the case of food items, "shelf-stable" and "perishable" are the two relevant antonyms.



        If you're categorizing stuff for storage, you might be more quantitative, and call your categories "expiring within 7 days" and "expiry 8 days or beyond", adjusting the numbers to suit your purpose. Never mind how you phrase the category names, "soon" is going to be ambiguous.






        share|improve this answer

























          1












          1








          1







          In the case of food items, "shelf-stable" and "perishable" are the two relevant antonyms.



          If you're categorizing stuff for storage, you might be more quantitative, and call your categories "expiring within 7 days" and "expiry 8 days or beyond", adjusting the numbers to suit your purpose. Never mind how you phrase the category names, "soon" is going to be ambiguous.






          share|improve this answer













          In the case of food items, "shelf-stable" and "perishable" are the two relevant antonyms.



          If you're categorizing stuff for storage, you might be more quantitative, and call your categories "expiring within 7 days" and "expiry 8 days or beyond", adjusting the numbers to suit your purpose. Never mind how you phrase the category names, "soon" is going to be ambiguous.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 5 hours ago









          CCTOCCTO

          47524




          47524





















              0














              Considering your use case, a user interface, I would have a input titled "Expires", and offer two sort options: "Sooner", and "Later".






              share|improve this answer



























                0














                Considering your use case, a user interface, I would have a input titled "Expires", and offer two sort options: "Sooner", and "Later".






                share|improve this answer

























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Considering your use case, a user interface, I would have a input titled "Expires", and offer two sort options: "Sooner", and "Later".






                  share|improve this answer













                  Considering your use case, a user interface, I would have a input titled "Expires", and offer two sort options: "Sooner", and "Later".







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 18 '14 at 12:33









                  DJ FarDJ Far

                  2,579810




                  2,579810



























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