Practise the standard verbs for submitting and approving timesheets on time.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ our timesheet by end of day Friday, rather than a submission nobody's actually logged until payroll's already running.'
We 'submit a timesheet' — the standard, simple collocation for filing hours before a deadline. The other options are less idiomatic here.
2 / 5
Fill in: 'A missed timesheet deadline can ___ a whole team's paycheck delayed nobody's actually budgeted around.'
We say a missed deadline will 'leave' a paycheck delayed — the standard, natural collocation for the resulting payroll disruption. The other options aren't idiomatic here.
3 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ billable hours against the project code daily, rather than reconstructing a week nobody actually remembers accurately.'
We 'log hours' — the standard, simple collocation for recording billable time as it happens. The other options are less idiomatic here.
4 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ every submitted timesheet against the project code before payroll, rather than a total nobody's actually verified.'
We 'approve a timesheet' — the standard, simple collocation for a manager signing off on logged hours. The other options are less idiomatic here.
5 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ timesheet discrepancies with the employee before the pay run, rather than an error nobody's actually corrected.'
We 'flag discrepancies' — the standard, simple collocation for raising a timesheet error before payroll runs. The other options aren't idiomatic here.