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Discover LudwigThe phrase "year past" is not correct or usable in written English as a standalone phrase
It is possible to use it as part of a larger sentence, such as "The year past has been filled with challenges and opportunities." In this context, "year past" is a noun phrase that is functioning as the subject of the sentence. However, it is more common and grammatically correct to use "past year" instead. For example, "The past year has been filled with challenges and opportunities."
Exact(51)
There was also a party atmosphere that year, past players said.
Her New Year's Eve shows are reflections on the year past and rallying cries for the year to come.
In most parts of life, the calendar marks the passage of time, with the end of the year prompting people to pause and reflect on the year past, then resolve to make resolutions that won't make it out of January.
Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the year for Jews, a time for contemplation, reflection on the year past, and of atonement to God for vows not kept.
9 30: Ray Ozzie talking about the year past, and investments over the year.
Qualcomm's profit fell 44percentt from the same quarter, a year past, to $1.2 billion.
Similar(7)
The immediate effect of Miles's decision to read Jesus "biographically" as God incarnate is that Jesus is furnished with a two-thousand-year past, an elephantine memory, and a lot of explaining to do.
They were dirtier, bluesier, and more dangerous, they lost more key members at inopportune times, and if the world was a more just place they'd similarly be packing our arenas going through the motions of their forty-year-past heyday.
Also, when asked about the past year, past month, or even past 24 hours, people may not accurately recall locations, setting characteristics, and drinking behaviors that were specific to a particular event.
Some fabulous books struggle.' Later this year, past chairs of the Orange will elect the best of the best, an overall winner for the decade.
With respect to the story you featured on Charleston, South Carolina, earlier this year ["Past Perfect," by Richard Nalley, April] I once ran afoul of the "War of Northern Aggression" when I included the term in a TV script about an appealing small Southern town.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com