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adverbs - The variations of in for the last few days - English Language . . . This same question was recently asked by you on English Language Learners wasn't it? I believe the answer there was that none of them are correct because all of them should say, "the Internet" Once that is fixed, then the only viable sentences are the ones that use "for the last few days", "in the last few days" and "in a few days" Although the meaning of the last one is different
Nowadays versus now days [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . . The Corpus of Contemporary American English does have a few cites for now days, but frankly, just look at the figures yourself: nowadays 3167 now days 7 And here are the figures from the British National Corpus: nowadays 1556 now days 0 That's how tiny a minority you're in For once, the spellchecker is actually right
In the upcoming days - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In Australian English, "in the upcoming days" sounds strange "In the coming days" is acceptable but probably too formal, I agree with @BoldBen's comment that "In the next few days" is a better choice
Gone are the days when . . . Is this expression often used? Gone are the days when a school or institution could count on being able to offer a standard curriculum and traditional programs to a steady stream of students and their parents Gone too are the days when communication was top-down Gone are the days of local entertainers coming to play or perform free
word choice - What are the abbreviations for days of the week . . . It will be used in a tabular data program to show information about free work days of employed and each column can't have enought space to include full week day name For "common form" I mean, what are the abbreviations that is more used in programs
Present perfect with in the last 10 days Specifically, the former means "in the last seven days leading up to now" One the other hand, last week would refer to a past time and be incompatible with the present perfect
In 2-3 days vs Within 2-3 days - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In 100-200 days means that it will happen no sooner than 100 days from now and no later than 200 days Within 100-200 days means it could happen any time between now and 200 days, but most likely fall between the 100th and 200th day Within within (wɪˈðɪn) prep in; inside; enclosed or encased by before (a period of time) has elapsed: within
meaning - Past few days or the past few days? - English Language . . . So when we say 'the past few days' we mean the complete set of 'past few days', not just some of them, and which means this time phrase matches the tense Do we use the phrase 'past few days' on its own? Highly unlikely, it lacks a sense of which days