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- In On the afternoon - WordReference Forums
I learnt that with afternoon we use the preposition "in", but I've just found a text with this example "On the afternoon of that day" where ON is used instead of IN Is that because of the word DAY?
- in on gt; the afternoons of Monday and Friday? - WordReference Forums
In all the previous posts, it doesn't seem to have come out clearly that the standard phrases we are accustomed to are ' on Monday, on Friday' and ' in the morning, in the afternoon' That's why you are seeing suggestions like "I'm usually available on Monday and Friday afternoons " and "I am available in the afternoon on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday " They both follow the normal way of
- Good Morning Afternoon Evening Night - WordReference Forums
Good afternoon -- 12:00 pm until dinner, unless you eat later in the evening like many Europeans I disagree with Panjandrum that 'Good evening' is appropriate for 4:30 pm To me it is a clear 'Good afternoon' Good evening -- I'd say that "good evening" can start at 5:00 pm, though Yes, generally say "good night" as a goodby
- this afernoon or in this afternoon | WordReference Forums
for the sentence "I can deliver the photos this afternoon", why I don't need to add the preposition "in" in front of this afternoon, so the new sentence would be " I can deliver the photos in this afternoon" Is the same rule applied to this morning afternoon, next week? Thank you
- in the late afternoon vs late in the afternoon
"in the late afternoon" - late is always as an adjective and means " near the end of a period of time, a person’s life" Example: (1)The store closes in the late afternoon (The time of closing store is always at 5:30 PM every afternoon) But in the phrase "late in the afternoon", I find it can have two meanings
- afternoon in the afternoon - WordReference Forums
Afternoon is a noun here; you already refer to a noun (appointment), and you need the preposition to turn "afternoon" into an adverbial phrase of time In (B), your reader is likely to be confused by your meaning
- on Monday afternoons on Mondays afternoon - WordReference Forums
Which of these statements would be most suitable to use when inquiring somebody about their afternoon activities? a) What does Sam do on Monday, Thursday and Friday afternoons? b) What does Sam do on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays afternoon? c) What does Sam do on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays
- de qué hora a qué hora se considera afternoon in the States?
12:00 - a little before twilight (depends on the season) = afternoon a little bit before twilight (or 6pm?) - darkness = evening (but usually we just say night) darkness - sunrise = night sunrise - 12:00 = morning Mostly the end of afternoon and the start of night depends on the season, I think
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