I am searching everywhere for the answer to this but I don't know what parts of speech I'm looking for so I'm not finding what I need.
Which one is it?: "The deliverable must be approved prior to closing out the effort." or "The deliverable must be approved prior to closing the effort out."
Same for: "...check the deliverable in/out" or "...check in/out the deliverable"
" or "The deliverable must be approved prior to closing the effort out. " Phrasal verbs like close out are best if the words are not separated, so I'd choose the first version. More natural than closing out the effort is eg wrapping up the task.
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Which one is it?: "The deliverable must be approved prior to closing out the effort." or "The deliverable must be approved prior to closing the effort out." Phrasal verbs like close out are best if the words are not separated, so I'd choose the first version.
More natural than closing out the effort is eg wrapping up the task.
Same for: "...check the deli
The deliverables (90% of the time this word is used in the plural form) must be approved prior to closing out the effort. (effort is very odd here. ... closing out the project / phase of the project / requirements phase of the project )
Once each deliverable is complete, you can check it off the list. (Not check in or check out)