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What is approval processes?
An approval process is a type of business process that includes steps to formally approve work from different levels of the organization. The work can include budgets, invoices, project outlines, marketing initiatives, or any other items that need a series of approvals from different departments.
What word means to not approve or reject?
Some common synonyms of reject are decline, refuse, repudiate, and spurn.
Is ratify the opposite of reject?
It is only resulting in more clutter around our home!”…What is the opposite of reject?
| accept | allow |
|---|---|
| OK | okay |
| let | agree to |
| sanction | authorizeUS |
| ratify | authoriseUK |
What’s a word for not allowing?
What is another word for not allowing?
| dismissing | refusing |
|---|---|
| disacknowledging | excluding |
| killing | outlawing |
| precluding | saying no to |
| setting aside | tabooing |
What’s the difference between ” approve ” and ” reject “?
You generally say that something is sent for “approval” and not “rejection”. However, that does not mean it will definitely be approved. It can still be rejected. Similarly, the person doing the approval can be termed an approver, but is never termed a rejecter.
What happens when I send an approval request?
A new Approval Request is sending an email but approve/reject buttons don’t actually approve or reject. When you click on either of them, it redirects the user to the Flow page with the message, ” You don’t have any pending requests at this time.”
Why does approval reject not working on power platform?
When you click on either of them, it redirects the user to the Flow page with the message, ” You don’t have any pending requests at this time.” It was working yesterday morning and then stopped working. I thought maybe it was due to some of the changes I had made in other sections of the flow (unrelated to that first step).
If the act of approving or rejecting the request is simply the click of a button, then obviously there could be two buttons labeled “Approve” and “Reject” next to the item, but this is clearly a design consideration and nothing to do with the use of English.