He anticipates that at least 400 more homes can be done with the stimulus funds.
From the tennessean.com
The foam injection can be done from the inside, and the drywall easily repaired.
From the dailyherald.com
Like many things, it looks effortless when you've done all the hard work before.
From the dailyherald.com
There are places where we ought to be able to work together and get things done.
From the newsweek.com
She can get it done on the glass and has enough handles to get out on the break.
From the stltoday.com
What can be done to alleviate the backup for folks trying to get onto Brentwood?
From the stltoday.com
The people of Massachusetts sent Scott Brown to Capitol Hill to get things done.
From the bostonherald.com
How is that any different from what almost every country on the planet has done.
From the washingtontimes.com
Turns out, thanks to Pangaea, she now knows she was simply done with lousy beer.
From the sacbee.com
More examples
Having finished or arrived at completion; "certain to make history before he's done"; "it's a done deed"; "after the treatment, the patient is through except for follow-up"; "almost through with his studies"
Cooked until ready to serve
Done is the debut album by 18th Dye, originally released in 1994.
Straitjacket Fits formed in Dunedin, New Zealand in 1986 and were a prominent band in the Flying Nun label's second wave of the Dunedin Sound.
(Doneness) Temperature is a description of how thoroughly cooked a cut of meat is based on the color, juiciness and internal temperature when served. ...
Used in forming the perfective aspect; Ready, fully cooked; In a state of having completed or finished an activity; Being exhausted or fully spent; Without hope or prospect of completion or success; Fashionable, socially acceptable, tasteful
The term used by traders to signal that a contract has been agreed upon.
As in cleaned, doctored, repaired. "This coin's been done. It isn't for me." (Also, "do" as in "Can I do this Barber Quarter before I buy it?"--said by one Bruce Lorich to the author, February 2, 1994.)
Verbs are marked for completion of an event or process: lived, eaten, slept, thought