until I assign the code
The correct phrase is "as of today," which indicates the current date or status. "As of to date" is not commonly used and may sound awkward; the more standard phrase is "to date," which refers to the time up until now. Therefore, "as of today" is the preferred expression for conveying current information.
To randomly assign one-half of the 100 students (labeled 0 to 99) to a treatment group using a long string of random digits, you can take pairs of digits from the string. For example, if you take two digits at a time, each pair will represent a number from 00 to 99. Assign those students whose labels match the generated numbers until you have selected 50 students for the treatment group, ensuring you skip any duplicates or numbers outside the range.
The correct answer to that keeps changing. In 2013, you are 87 until February 6, and on February 6 you turn 88.
To figure out the rhyme pattern of a poem or song, you need to examine the end sounds of each line. Assign each line that shares the same end sound a unique letter. For example, if the first four lines end with the words "cat," "bath," "hat," and "math," you can assign them the rhyme pattern ABAB. Keep assigning letters to lines with similar end sounds until you identify the overall pattern of the poem or song.
The perimeter could be anything between 136 and 156 inches. We can't figure it out until we know the length of the third side, and that could be anything between 58 and 78 inches.
The phrase you are probably looking for is "up until".
Its not worth worrying about anything until it happens.
this question contains incorrect grammar. i will not answer this question until the poster rewrites this phrase in correct grammar. ILY!
I love you mom and dad! Is there anything else I can do?
The correct phrase is "weather the storm." This means to endure a difficult situation or challenge until it passes.
That's correct. The phrase "In God We Trust" wasn't added to paper currency until 1957.
Nothing - the correct phrase is "grin and bear it," meaning "fake a pleasant expression and deal with whatever is going on until things get better."
until dinnertime
The prepositional phrase is until the hull was dry.
No. The correct expression is "even though." Correct: Even though the assignment wasn't due until Friday, Ella decided to get an early start on it. Incorrect: Even although... Ouch, that's just bad. I can't even finish the sentence. But you get the idea. ;)
It is usually uttered in a warning not to take anything for granted until one is certain since no one really knows who will win the election until the votes are counted.
It is an adverb phrase, modifying a verb. There is no noun that could be modified by "until."