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Difference between at and in when specifying location I am used to saying "I am in India " But somewhere I saw it said "I am at Puri (Oriisa)" I would like to know the differences between "in" and "at" in the above two sentences
capitalization - Do you capitalize the names of holidays? - English . . . It knew what word I wanted, but made it lower case, where it would usually recognize incorrect capitalization So I wondered: Is my spelling checker wrong? Or is capitalization of holiday names not a requirement? And either way, any insight on why the spelling checker would be this way?
At a hotel or in a hotel - English Language Usage Stack Exchange What is the difference between at a hotel and in a hotel? The NYTimes seems to be using both of them I looked up the ngram on google and it seems in a hotel is used more often than at a hotel, whi
Lunch vs luncheon - English Language Usage Stack Exchange What is the difference between lunch and luncheon? Is it just American spelling vs British spelling, or do they have some sort of formal professional touch to them, say, a casual midday meal with f
Whats the difference between go on holiday and go for a holiday? In the uncountable form, 'holiday' is the time away This is the 'go on holiday [for a few days]' form The measure ('for a few days') is optional There is no real difference in the overall meaning of the two forms, though the first might be felt to slightly emphasise the fact that the holiday has a specific fixed length
word choice - On the last week or In the last week? - English . . . According to Google Ngram viewer, "in the last week of " is much more common This fits with my feeling as a native speaker, too: in or during for a range of time like a week, month, or season ("in the last week of August"); on for a specific day ("on August tenth"); at for a specific time ("at 4pm")
What do you call someone who doesnt like celebrating holidays? There's such a range of holidays Lots of people hate Christmas but like Halloween, and vice versa And other even more niche events (German-American Day, village fetes and state fairs, Beltane, Highland Games, Talk Like A Pirate Day, Gathering of the Juggalos ) You want a word for someone who doesn't like having any fun, or someone who refuses traditional holidays, or prefers to do their
Is square a synonym for roundabout (noun)? 1 There's a Holiday Inn just up the road from me that gives its address as The Squareabout, because it's in the middle of a large and relatively square roundabout
What is the term for someone who doesnt want to know? I am looking for a term for someone who is purposefully not learning information - usually bad information Goes hand in hand with people who want to "hide their head in the sand" or have the "wool