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  • grammaticality - What day is it today? vs. What day is today . . .
    The last example means something different, though “What day is (it) today?” refers to the day of the week, not the date
  • Horoscopes - interact. stltoday. com
    Horoscopes for readers of STLToday com and the St Louis Post-Dispatch
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I am writing a résumé I want to specify that I started my education in 2009 and as of now I am at the 4th grade (in other words, still learning), so how should I specify that in résumé: 2009 - pre
  • Horoscopes - St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    Check in daily for a long-form dose of mystical revelations The Royal Stars includes an in-depth look at your birthday personality and a star rating from difficult to dynamic to guide your daily decisions, along with the day’s astrological forecast
  • Todays assumption or todays assumption — which is valid grammar?
    14 We (non native English-speakers) are writing a paper and are wondering if the following construct is valid English: Yesterday's assumption is no longer valid Specifically the apostrophe after yesterday (and likewise in today and tomorrow) brings up some debate Can anyone give a clear answer whether this is proper English?
  • helsley getting the win today - STLtoday. com
    helsley getting the win today by musicman » 24 May 2025 21:06 pm How do you explain this? The cardinals were ahead when he entered the game Closer Ryan Helsley (2-0) was an awarded the win by the official scorer for pitching the ninth and not his 11th save scoutyjones2 Forum User Posts: 6136 Joined: 23 May 2024 19:43 pm
  • Why is today morning wrong but tomorrow morning right?
    I think it is a good question When there is yesterday morning and tomorrow morning, why have an exception for this morning (which means today's morning)? Yes, idiom, but I actually do like idiomatic extensions like these - as long as everybody knows what is meant and no grammar or semantic rules are violated
  • Next Friday vs. This Friday [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    If you say next month, you refer to the "very next" month (the equivalent of "this Friday"), whereas if you say "this month", you refer to the current month in progress (which has no equivalent for a day of the week of course where you would say "today Friday")


















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