this is one of those things that different people interpret differently. I use "afternoon" to refer to the time after 12 pm (noon) and before the end of the customary workday (5 pm). I don't adjust my usage based on daylight hours.
If you are reached at all hours, whether at work, home, or elsewhere on a single mobile phone, then list the one number under "telephone". If you are reached at work on one number, and on a single mobile phone at all other hours, you might list the two numbers as "workday" and "other times".
You said "login" is a noun (correct) but your example ("login screen") shows it being used as an adjective. The single word can be either an adjective or noun, but your answer is inconsistent.
A person who perform login to site. This person: "was login" to site "logined" to site Which version is correct?
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: HIGH PROFILE: UAMS' Dr. Michael Birrer pushing for NCI designation
Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette: HIGH PROFILE: Dr. Cam Patterson nourishes UAMS with rock ānā roll fervor after taking it on in a bluesy time
HIGH PROFILE: Dr. Cam Patterson nourishes UAMS with rock ānā roll fervor after taking it on in a bluesy time
On Thursday, the Board of Trustees of the University of Arkansas approved the selection of a new chancellor for the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS). According to reports, Professor ...
Workday cofounder and executive chair Aneel Bhusri addresses attendees during the keynote session at Workday Rising 2025 in San Francisco. These days, nearly every enterprise software company is ...