Allison rushed to finsih her paper before the deadline.
"to meet her deadline"
Your question is unclear. Is this a headline? Or are you trying to create a sentence?If this is a headline (for example, in a newspaper), then may I suggest the following:Election-filing deadline has passedYou should not use "past"; you need to use "passed". And you should use a hyphen for a compound modifier such as "election-filing".
I drudged through my homework to finish it before the deadline.
Her lucubration was so intense, she finished the paper before the deadline.
Scarce basically means there is not very much of something... For example: Butter is very scarce. The information provided is scarce.
As another deadline loomed he worked as fast as he could.
A deadline can be changed, but a priority deadline cannot.
I must finish this essay by tomorrow's deadline. I am perplexed by this essay question.
In 1977 the Supreme Court set a deadline for the restoration of civilian rule. Then in 1978 the Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for Prime Minister Zulifikar Ali Bhutto.
Deadlines is the plural of deadline
Yes, the relative pronoun 'who' is the correct pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'students' in both parts of the sentence."The students who take this deadline seriously are the students who are accepted."
I have the utmost respect for people who endeavor to improve their vocabulary.The voters had the utmost regard for her ability as a leader.The firemen did their utmost to rescue the residents from the burning home.