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Jiaruchan Posted 16 years ago
Vocabulary

The trial operations have officially WRAPPED UP

The trial operations have officially WRAPPED UP.

Two questions:

1--When the phrase 'wrap up' is used, does it have to imply the trial operations are sort of successful?

2--Is it necessary to use passive voice here like : The trial operations have officially BEEN WRAPPED UP.?

Thank you.
  

Top answer

Hi, The trial operations have officially WRAPPED UP. Two questions: 1--When the phrase 'wrap up' is used, does it have to imply the trial operations are sort of successful? Yes.

  • Hi, The trial operations have officially WRAPPED UP.
  • Two questions: 1--When the phrase 'wrap up' is used, does it have to imply the trial operations are sort of successful?
  • Yes.
  • A normal conclusion.
  • 2--Is it necessary to use passive voice here No like : The trial operations have officially BEEN WRAPPED UP.?
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3 Answers
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Hi,

The trial operations have officially WRAPPED UP.

Two questions:

1--When the phrase 'wrap up' is used, does it have to imply the trial operations are sort of successful? Yes. A normal conclusion.

2--Is it necessary to use passive voice here No like : The trial operations have officially BEEN WRAPPED UP.?

I don't clearly undertstand what 'trial
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Thank you for the reply.

Trial operation:

The Shanghai Expo officially opens on May 1st. During the past few days, the authorities conducted several test runs as trial operations. As a result, lots of problems occurred from people jumping lines to inadequate services. My questions are:

If the trial runs are not a success, do we still use 'wrap up' to denote its conclus
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Hi,

Trial operation:

The Shanghai Expo officially opens on May 1st. During the past few days, the authorities conducted several test runs as trial operations. As a result, lots of problems occurred from people jumping lines to inadequate services. My questions are:

If the trial runs are not a success, do we still use 'wrap up' to denote its conclusion?

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