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Last updated at November 11th, 2020Log in (two words) should only be used as a verb. Login (one word) can be a noun or an adjective. Since noun and login are both single words than end in with an N, remembering whether to use login or log in should not be difficult. If you need a refresher on the recent history of these terms or their appropriate usage cases, you can always refer back to this article.
Status : OnlineLogin, spelled as one word, is only a noun or an adjective. For example, the information you use to sign into your email is your login (noun), and the page where you sign in is the login page (adjective). Log in is two words when it functions as a verb. For example, you log in with your login information.
Status : OnlineThe nouns are login, logout, logon, logoff, signin, signout, signon and signoff. You log/sign in to or on to a site, not into or onto, since you log out of or off from (please, not off of) the site and there is no such word as offrom or outof. Also when using the noun, you would refer to your logon to, logoff from, login to, logoff from etc.
Status : OnlineCreate an account or log into Facebook. Connect with friends, family and other people you know. Share photos and videos, send messages and get updates.
Status : OnlineMany people who own a computer (or even a phone) access services and content several times a day, even without realizing it. Sometimes, doing so requires a passcode (like a phone with a screen lock), while other times, it does not. English has a different verb phrase for each of these scenarios: log in and log on.
Status : OnlineTroubleshoot
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