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  1. Jul 31, 2015 · (2) Your license has expired. [action] [ a past form of the verb to expire [expired/has expired/had expired] This is an action,[ an intransitive verb, in this particular case—one that doesn’t take a direct object or an indirect object] Your license is expired. [state] resulting from an action] (of an intransitive verb—in this case.)

  2. Sep 7, 2012 · English - US. Sep 7, 2012. #3. After the contract expires, it is in the expired state. "Expired" is a past participle used as an adjective: an expired contract. If it expires on Dec 31, 2012, it will be expired from then on: Jan 1, 2013 until forever. Unless it is renewed, the contract will (still) be expired on August 13, 3327.

  3. Jan 1, 2012 · Senior Member. English - NW US. Jan 1, 2012. #2. If something lapses, that usually means that you forgot to renew it. If it expires, then you may have known that it was going to expire the day before, but you did not, or could not do anything about it. "The milk has expired." "My auto insurance has lapsed." According to the dictionary, lapse ...

  4. Sep 8, 2017 · Sep 8, 2017. #2. No. "Overdue" cannot be used - it means that something should be done before a date, not that something will stop being useful. To expire" is correct but the verb "to expire" is intransitive (it cannot have an object) and therefore you cannot use it in the passive "it will be expired." You have to put the verb into the dynamic:

  5. Jan 9, 2014 · Jan 9, 2014. #1. 1. An expired contract will have no legal effect. 2. An expiring contract will have no legal effect. Sentence 1 is natural, but seems ungrammatical. We should use a present participle ( instead of past participle) to function as an adjective to modify "contract"regarding an active expression。. Am I correct?.

  6. Mar 3, 2020 · Massachusetts, U.S. English - U.S. Mar 3, 2020. #4. I would say "my contract expired on Feb. 29th," using the simple past. You are referring to an event that occurred at one time in the past. (Your profile says that one of your native languages is French. French often uses the present perfect, "has expired," where English uses the simple past.

  7. Jan 2, 2010 · Jan 2, 2010. #1. Hello, When do you use due and expire interchangeable? e.g. 1."The contract is expired in three months " or "is due in three months"? 2."The medicine is expired in three months " or "is due in three months"? 3."The deadline is expired in three months " or "is due in three months"? Thank you.

  8. Dec 3, 2012 · Senior Member. Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. English - US. Dec 3, 2012. #3. Deceased is more common. Expired would be understood (I think) but it's sufficiently unusual that people might be momentarily confused by it. My own preference is to just say dead because I don't find euphemisms for death at all comforting, but I realize not everyone ...

  9. Jul 8, 2014 · In a letter referring to something that will happen at a specified date in the future, should I use the future or present tense? The logic is that the case now (specified), but the event is in the future. My example: "Our records show that your visa will expire 29 August...

  10. May 11, 2018 · Hindi. May 11, 2018. #4. Packard said: I would use "has expired", if it has already done so. I would use "will expire" as such: Dear customer, your data plan for this number will expire at midnight today. or. Dear customer, you data plan for this number expires at midnight today. So is the sentence "Dear customer your data pack has expired on ...

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