We will ___ the app to the store for review tomorrow.
To submit an app means to upload your build to an app store and request publication. It is the standard collocation: "submit the app to App Store Connect". "Hand in over", "post up", and "send over" are not idiomatic. Submit pairs with app, build, and update, and begins the store review process.
2 / 5
The build must ___ before it goes live.
To pass review means your submitted app meets the store's guidelines and is approved. It is the natural collocation: "the app passed review in two days". "Win review", "beat review", and "clear over review" are not standard. Pass review pairs with app and build; the opposite is to be rejected.
3 / 5
We can ___ an update to fix the crash without a full rebuild.
To push an update means to deliver a new version to users' devices. It is the standard collocation: "push an over-the-air update". "Shove", "drive out", and "throw" are not idiomatic. Push pairs with update, build, and notification, and conveys actively delivering changes to clients.
4 / 5
Stores let us ___ the build to a small percentage of users first.
To roll out a build in the app-store context means to release it in a staged way, starting with a fraction of users. It is the standard collocation: "roll out the build to 5%". "Unroll", "spread over", and "leak out" are not the term. Roll out pairs with build, update, and release for controlled mobile launches.
5 / 5
The next release will ___ an older OS version we no longer support.
To deprecate an OS version means to stop supporting it, signalling that future builds will not target it. It is the standard collocation: "deprecate iOS 13 support". "Cancel", "expire out", and "retire off" are not idiomatic. Deprecate pairs with OS version, API, and feature, and gives users notice before support ends.