[General] Just in seconds or in just seconds

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DGray

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Jun 5, 2014
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Student or Learner
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Bulgarian
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Canada
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Bulgaria
Hello everyone, and thank you in advance for your time.

Which of the following is correct:

just in seconds

in just seconds

As a matter of fact, I’m aware that they’re both acceptable, but are they fully interchangeable? Should 'in just seconds' be used more about negative events/news or are they fully identical indeed? I will give more specific examples, if needed.

Thank you once again for your time reading this!
 
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What is the context? "Just in seconds" is odd to me.
 
I've never heard "Just in seconds". I'm inclined to think it's not used b native speakers.
Still, we can tell you it's not interchangeable and not identical to the phrase that we do use.
 
Thank you!

Well, it is part of an advertising text about a software service that can be activated and start functioning very quickly. To be honest, I thought ‘just in seconds’ was the right expression. However, I’m not a native speaker.

Example: Activate …and protect your computer in just seconds!

It’s related to an academic assignment. I checked with Google but there’re plenty of results from various sources containing both ‘just in seconds’ and ‘in just seconds’.
 
For me "in just seconds" works.
 
Your sentence with "in just seconds" is correct.
I've looked at a few of those Google hits. Many are full of other mistakes, indicating that they are not written by native speakers.
 
Thanks!

I’m really not sure where I’ve heard of ‘just in seconds’ but it was probably a movie (not the title) or another unreliable source. From now on, I know that it’s at least uncommon, so I will not use it.
 
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