安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- on at Christmas - WordReference Forums
As stated previously we use at Christmas, on Christmas Day I should clarify that slightly We do not say on Christmas if we are describing the time of an action If you were to search for "on Christmas" on UK websites only you could find "Spotlight on Christmas", but that is a metaphorical spotlight shining on the Christmas period
- ESL Conversation Questions - Christmas (I-TESL-J)
How many Christmas cards did you receive last year? How many Christmas cards do you send? How many presents do you usually give? If you are not a Christian, does the intense focus on Christmas in the U S make you feel bad in any way (e g , ignored, dismissed, angry, etc )? If you could go anywhere during Christmas vacation, where would you go?
- On Christmas or in Christmas? | WordReference Forums
I can't think of a situation in which I would ever say "in Christmas " I would say "I usually go on holiday (vacation) at Christmastime," or "…for Christmas " In the second part of your sentence, "on Christmas Day" is correct
- in at on holiday [+holidays] - WordReference Forums
I told you the difference "On" talks about the holidays themselves (in the U S , days like Christmas, New Year's Day, Easter, Independence Day, etc ) and "at" is more generally the time during which these holidays are celebrated It would be somewhat difficult to construct examples that unambiguously demonstrate this difference
- Tatsuki-Movies for Christmas lt; (TESL TEFL)
A Christmas Story (1983) A hilarious and heartwarming story of a Christmas in the 1940's Dir Bob Clark A Christmas Without Snow (1980) John Houseman as a dictatorial choir director who encounters problems while rehearsing Handel's Messiah is really worth watching Dir John Korty A Christmas to Remember (1979) A grandfather (Jason
- Holiday vs holidays - WordReference Forums
Maybe you misunderstood "Christmas holiday" refers to an eventual vacation (in BE), whereas "the holidays" refers to the holiday season (which implies Christmas, and refers to the period of Advent, when people get in a holiday mood and do Christmas shopping and decorating - while not necessarily on vacation)
- ESL Christmas Activities (Quizzes, Crossword Puzzles, Listening . . .
Christmas Traditions (Letitia Bradley) Christmas Story (Letitia Bradley) Christmas in Denmark (Klaus Helmer) Wh Questions - A Christmas Dialog (Douglas Gilbert) Crossword Puzzles From iteslj org Christmas Crossword Puzzle (Vera Mello) [E-7] Christmas Dinner (Donna Tatsuki) [M-10] Christmas Crossword Puzzle (John Erskin) [M-8] Java Word Games
- Coming Vs Coming up soon (dates, events) | WordReference Forums
Christmas is coming Christmas is coming up Christmas is coming soon Christmas is coming up soon Christmas will be here soon Wherever you add "soon" it implies a shorter time period than the same expression without "soon" So it changes the meaning
|
|
|