|
- How to teach days of the week in English - UsingEnglish. com
Students can sometimes pick up the confusion about whether Sunday or Monday is the first day of the week ELT materials from the UK generally start the week on Monday, and American ones often start from Sunday This can obviously lead to confusion in students who have been exposed to both
- [Grammar] Sunday, Sundays and Sundays - UsingEnglish. com
The plural form in 1 is appropriate if you're thinking of every Sunday The singular form in 2 is appropriate if you're thinking about Sunday as a day distinct from other days I suggest you keep things simple and use sentence 1 The red part in Sunday 's weather shows a possessive, not a contraction
- word usage - using next to days of the week - English Language . . .
If today is Sunday (or any day) and you say, "This Sunday" it means "this coming sunday " That is what "this Sunday" is short for If you say, "next Sunday" it is referring to the following after a previously stated Sunday, or the following Sunday after "this Sunday" with the understanding that person you are talking to knows what this Sunday
- This coming Sunday, This Sunday or Next Sunday? - UsingEnglish. com
If I wanted to refer to Sunday the 14th of May today, I would say 'Sunday week' or 'a week on Sunday' not 'next Sunday' Sunday the 7th is obviously the next Sunday after Thursday the 4th I would most probably use 'on Sunday' or 'this Sunday' to refer to Sunday the 7th, but I might use 'next Sunday'
- On (the) closest Sunday or on (the) nearest Sunday
Judging from your example I think the word you want is the 'next' Sunday Something happened last month On the next Sunday, something else happened If it were the nearest Sunday before the first thing happened, you would use the past perfect tense and say, Something happened two Sundays ago On the previous Sunday, something else had happened
- prepositions - Every Sunday or on every Sunday? - English Language . . .
So you can also say: It's something I do on Sunday or Sundays instead of It's something I do every Sunday that is more clear and emphatic In AmE, you can also use Sundays,Mondays, etc as an adverb to mean every Sunday, every Monday, etc as follows, but it's not much common: It's something l do Sundays He works Sundays (every Sunday)
- in the morning on Sunday and on the morning of Sunday
Jesse takes the train in the morning on Sunday or Jesse takes the train in the morning of Sunday It looks to me that both are correct If yes, do they have different connotations?
- on or at Sunday noon | UsingEnglish. com ESL Forum
You say on Sunday, but at noon In this case, the name of day of the week determines the use of on in the phrase: on Sunday noon just like in: on Sunday night (on Sunday, but at night) You can also say Sunday noon, without the prepositon on, though
|
|
|