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'End of the line' or 'End of line'?
Periods in quotes and how to end the sentence the quote lies in“Much of it is” or “Much of it are”?Difference meaning :having ving vs having p.pUsage of 'could' and 'would'Difference between “to” and “to the”Past tenses in EnglishDon't understand Me vs. MyUsing a dash, parenthesis, and comma (weird example)Why doesn't “completely” work in the sentence “My first choice is completely Oxford”?What is the difference between racial inclusivity and interracial inclusivity?
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As an English learning student, I'm having a trouble understanding the differences of these 3 expressions.
The end of line
End of the line
End of line
Could someone explain the differences please?
grammar
New contributor
add a comment |
As an English learning student, I'm having a trouble understanding the differences of these 3 expressions.
The end of line
End of the line
End of line
Could someone explain the differences please?
grammar
New contributor
If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago
add a comment |
As an English learning student, I'm having a trouble understanding the differences of these 3 expressions.
The end of line
End of the line
End of line
Could someone explain the differences please?
grammar
New contributor
As an English learning student, I'm having a trouble understanding the differences of these 3 expressions.
The end of line
End of the line
End of line
Could someone explain the differences please?
grammar
grammar
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
user343146user343146
6
6
New contributor
New contributor
If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago
add a comment |
If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago
If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago
If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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oldest
votes
The first is noun phrase and the second is (normally) an adjective.
End of the line.
This is a phrase that is talking about the final stop in a destination. It originates from railways and the end of a physical railway track. Villains have been known to comically say, "This is the end of the line for you!"
End of line.
This is normally not used in conversation. In programming terms, it's an adjective for an invisible character that is, literally, a marker for the end of a line of code. (An end-of-line character.) In the movie Tron, the computer-based antagonist said "end of line" at the end of conversations rather than "goodbye." That's the only situation I know of when it's been used in any way other than, strictly speaking, programming terms.
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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votes
The first is noun phrase and the second is (normally) an adjective.
End of the line.
This is a phrase that is talking about the final stop in a destination. It originates from railways and the end of a physical railway track. Villains have been known to comically say, "This is the end of the line for you!"
End of line.
This is normally not used in conversation. In programming terms, it's an adjective for an invisible character that is, literally, a marker for the end of a line of code. (An end-of-line character.) In the movie Tron, the computer-based antagonist said "end of line" at the end of conversations rather than "goodbye." That's the only situation I know of when it's been used in any way other than, strictly speaking, programming terms.
add a comment |
The first is noun phrase and the second is (normally) an adjective.
End of the line.
This is a phrase that is talking about the final stop in a destination. It originates from railways and the end of a physical railway track. Villains have been known to comically say, "This is the end of the line for you!"
End of line.
This is normally not used in conversation. In programming terms, it's an adjective for an invisible character that is, literally, a marker for the end of a line of code. (An end-of-line character.) In the movie Tron, the computer-based antagonist said "end of line" at the end of conversations rather than "goodbye." That's the only situation I know of when it's been used in any way other than, strictly speaking, programming terms.
add a comment |
The first is noun phrase and the second is (normally) an adjective.
End of the line.
This is a phrase that is talking about the final stop in a destination. It originates from railways and the end of a physical railway track. Villains have been known to comically say, "This is the end of the line for you!"
End of line.
This is normally not used in conversation. In programming terms, it's an adjective for an invisible character that is, literally, a marker for the end of a line of code. (An end-of-line character.) In the movie Tron, the computer-based antagonist said "end of line" at the end of conversations rather than "goodbye." That's the only situation I know of when it's been used in any way other than, strictly speaking, programming terms.
The first is noun phrase and the second is (normally) an adjective.
End of the line.
This is a phrase that is talking about the final stop in a destination. It originates from railways and the end of a physical railway track. Villains have been known to comically say, "This is the end of the line for you!"
End of line.
This is normally not used in conversation. In programming terms, it's an adjective for an invisible character that is, literally, a marker for the end of a line of code. (An end-of-line character.) In the movie Tron, the computer-based antagonist said "end of line" at the end of conversations rather than "goodbye." That's the only situation I know of when it's been used in any way other than, strictly speaking, programming terms.
answered 39 mins ago
Jason BassfordJason Bassford
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19.6k32346
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user343146 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user343146 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user343146 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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If you mean carriage-return followed by line-feed, that is "End of Line".
– Hot Licks
36 mins ago