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- a day of, or the day of? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I wrote this thing; "I woke up as any other usual day, but my spirit was high After a long period of non-stop, vigorous working, I finally could relax, as it was a the day of rest " I strongly
- In what contexts do we use In the day and on the day?
Or On the day of July 6th I went to the store I can think of no usage for "in the day" It simply isn't said If you want to indicate you did something while the sun was in the sky you would say, "in the daytime" or "during the day" We went to the zoo in the daytime and at night we got dinner During the day we went to the zoo
- articles - take the day off vs take a day off - English Language . . .
As usual with definite vs indefinite article, the definite article implies a specific day and the indefinite article does not However, in context, even the indefinite article can mean "today"
- difference between in the day and during the day?
Also eat it later over the day Frankly, I don't see any implications as for the number of eatings occurring in\during\over the day In the OP's example, in the day definitely does not mean "in one sitting"
- prepositions - What is the difference between in the day, on the day . . .
Tell me please the difference between the following sentences February 11 was really hectic, so I had to do a ton on the day February 11 was really hectic, so I had to do a ton in the day
- Is there any difference between the phrase from day to day, day by . . .
" From day to day " can denote contrast between one day and the next It also suggests variance, not necessarily results that trend in one direction Examples: "My duties vary from day to day" "There is no discernible change from day to day"
- “on a day” vs “in a day” - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
"on a day" is the only incorrect usage here Most native speakers would probably use "per day," but you can also use "in one day" Alternatively, you can restructure the sentence so it sounds more natural, like "I don't eat more than three tablespoons of molasses in one day"
- What is the difference between during a day and during the day?
3 The first, during a day, means "over the course of a 24 hour period", or possibly "between waking and sleeping" It would be used for general statements, such as those about a typical day The second, during the day, has two possible meanings Either it is referring to a specific day, or it means "during the daytime "
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