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How to say that something happened in the past while emphasizing that it is not finished yet?

English Language & Usage Asked on March 14, 2021

Let’s say that we are in a 2-round tech-competition for which we have already entered the selected list of the first round and waiting to see the results for the 2nd round. Here I want to put the emphasis on the fact that our work was good enough to have the above result.

I want to somehow put that in my resume as one sentence for the sake of brevity!

If I say "Our solution has already shortlisted us in the X competition", would that send the message that we are waiting for the final evaluation? or maybe people misunderstand that’s the best we could have made for this competition.

What if I say "Our solution currently shortlisted us in the X competition"? is it grammatically correct and also does it better emphasize that we are waiting for the rest of the evaluation?

One Answer

I suggest “Our solution qualified us for the second round.

Qualify = to succeed in getting into a competition:

Cambridge

Correct answer by Anton on March 14, 2021

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