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“What day is it today?” or “What day is today?” - Preply In “What day is today?” “today” is acting as a predicate nominative that completes a linking verb and renames the noun “day ” The answer is usually “Today is…” our anniversary, Independence Day, Friday My Wedding Day Otherwise we ask "What is today's date" in order to get the actual date
Are you working today or Do you work today? 13 " Are you working today? " is a specific question about this day - not this day of the week, but this exact day For example, it might be a Wednesday, and you know the other person normally works Wednesdays, but perhaps you are enquiring if they took a vacation day " Do you work today " sounds a little unclear but it could be okay in context
By the end of today or By the end of the day [closed] Which is the correct (or more correct) expression: By the end of today By the end of the day My context is a promise to send an email today (i e , before tomorrow)
word usage - Why isnt it natural to say throughout today or . . . For example, if I said " yesterday I went to a festival, and there were musical acts throughout the day " you would understand that the festival was a single event that happened on a specific day (yesterday) but that it comprised of individual musical acts happening throughout They are different ways of referring to time
I will be. . . or I am free the rest of today? I will be free for the rest of today Implies you are free right now and for the rest of the day, but not tomorrow After that, I was free the rest of yesterday No You could say: "After that, I was free the rest of the day " Assuming it has already been established the activity was yesterday
word order - Today is rainy Vs. Its rainy today. - English . . . Is it correct to say " Today is rainy" (or " Tomorrow will be frost ")? Normally I mention the time-expression in the end of the sentences as I was taught in past For example: It is rainy today It will be frost tomorrow But in the first examples that I'm asking about them, there's neither subject pronoun nor time-expression in the end That's why I'm asking my question
Days of the Week in Spanish: Everything You Need To Know Beyond religious aspects, “viernes” heralds the end of the workweek and the beginning of relaxation and social gatherings Sábado: The day of rest Derived from the Hebrew “Shabbat” (“ Sabbath ”), “sábado” signifies a day of rest and breaks the pattern of Roman-derived names that most of the other days of the week in Spanish