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Ann225 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Designated, inventory

Hi,

1) "There are more time slots designated/assigned for the exam. You can either take it on 12.,13., or 15. January."

Is 'designated' appropriate and correct in this sentence or is it too formal?

2) Accounting:

"You can't forget to take the sold goods from inventory/withdraw it from inventory/remove it from storage."

Are all these possible when I'm trying to say that I need to account for goods that left the retail?

Thank you.

  

Top answer

1. Generally, the words "designated" and "assigned" are used for the original dates the exam was scheduled for. If more dates have to opened because of an unexpectedly large number of test takers, then you'd typically say: "(Because of an unexpectedly large number of applicants) Additional dates have been opened up for the exam.

  • 1.
  • Generally, the words "designated" and "assigned" are used for the original dates the exam was scheduled for.
  • If more dates have to opened because of an unexpectedly large number of test takers, then you'd typically say: "(Because of an unexpectedly large number of applicants) Additional dates have been opened up for the exam.
  • You can the exam on Jan.
  • " 2.
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1 Answers
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1. Generally, the words "designated" and "assigned" are used for the original dates the exam was scheduled for. If more dates have to opened because of an unexpectedly large number of test takers, then you'd typically say: "(Because of an unexpectedly large number of applicants) Additional dates have been opened up for the exam. You can the exam on Jan. 12, 13, or 15 (in addition to the or

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