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  • At Night or In the Night? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The same with in the night, if someone said that you would think of any time between the hours of 8pm and 6am, or thereabouts However, at night generally means the specific time between when night begins and when you go to sleep, let's say between 8pm and 10pm It's similar with other specific times of day, such as at midnight or at noon
  • What is an appropriate greeting to use at night time?
    "Good night" as a greeting was once a feature found almost exclusively in Ireland In James Joyce's "The Dead", for example, it is used both as greeting: —O, Mr Conroy, said Lily to Gabriel when she opened the door for him, Miss Kate and Miss Julia thought you were never coming Good night, Mrs Conroy And as a farewell:
  • word usage - 1 oclock in the morning OR 1 oclock at night? - English . . .
    'Night' is defined as: "The period of time between 'Evening' and 'Dawn' " People tend to get confused at the difference between the terms 'DAY' and 'DATE' If it is Monday and it becomes 2 a m , since the light of the sun is no longer visible in the sky then that is the 'Night-of-the-previous-day", so it is 'Monday-Night'
  • meaning - How should midnight on. . . be interpreted? - English . . .
    The convention stems from the term itself Midnight comes from 'mid-night ' In conversation, the 'night' of which 'midnight' is in the middle, is considered the night of the date mentioned If you are referring to a deadline, this also will refer to the stroke of 12 after the evening of the same date Example: The paper is due by Friday at
  • grammar - Which one is correct? the last or last - English Language . . .
    “Last Saturday”, not “the last” “You use last in expressions such as last Friday, last night, and last year to refer, for example,to the most recent Friday, night, or year ——- I got married last July He never made it home at all last night
  • On Saturday afternoon or in the Saturday afternoon?
    The choice of prepositions depends upon the temporal context in which you're speaking "On ~ afternoon" implies that the afternoon is a single point in time; thus, that temporal context would take the entire afternoon as one of several different afternoons, or in other words, one would use "on" when speaking within the context of an entire week
  • tenses - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Thus, I can ask whether you have seen it [at some indeterminate time in the past] Last night's showing of the episode, however, is a one-time thing, which you either caught or you didn't Thus, I can't ask "*Have you seen last night's showing of House MD", at least not without sounding a bit awkward –
  • Different ways to say you are leaving work for the day
    Let me call it a day! Good evening (or night, depending on time)!| I'm leaving! Enjoy the rest of the day (if time is left of the workday) May I leave? (asking permission, if allowed to leave early) (Good)bye! I'm all done; heading home Bye! You can be creative, but you don't want to sound 'outlandish', for sure!


















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