Possessive s for referring to time - English Language Learners Stack . . . In this case, it's common to say "the morning news" to refer to a TV news program that is broadcast in the mornings, or such programs in general "This morning's news" means something that was in the news this morning, one particular morning
prepositions - in the morning vs on cold mornings - English . . . Mornings, for example, only happen once a day The sentence concerns the occurrence of specific thing - when it happens It is not about the car being in the morning (that sounds silly) It is about what to do with your car when the cold morning occurs
Is the phrase “In the morning on Friday” correct? In the morning on Friday is grammatical and understandable, but not usual I think it would be used only if there were some reason to emphasise separately that it was in the morning and that is was on Friday; but in that case I think you're more likely to put the day first "I'll see you on Friday In the morning" Another problem with your formulation is that in the morning can mean "tomorrow
word choice - How to say that you are available - English Language . . . Setting everything else aside, I think that "from 3 till 5" should be " from 3 to 5 " or " between 3 and 5 " (my preference) And "every day" does not say anything at all about the hours when you are available, it only says the days on which you are available Best would be Every day, any time except between 3 and 5
a morning greeting: is it morning, gmorning or neither? Simple answer: The correct, formal greeting is " Good morning " (provided the current time of day is morning, then it would become " good afternoon ") Any other variation is casual, or colloquial speech There are also differences between the way the greeting may be said in different regional accents, and between British, American, Australian, and other native English speaking countries In
Morning-- gt;countable or uncountable? - English Language Learners Stack . . . He sat by the river all morning In this sentence morning is uncountable because it refers to a particular period of time of a day But if you say He sits by the river every morning In this case morning is countable, because it refers to different mornings The is not used because the is used to specify or determine nouns but in this case morning is already determined by determiner all