I will be available anytime during the morning, until 4pm I am trying to answer someone regarding my availability for an interview with this sentence: I will be available anytime during the morning, until 4 pm Is this grammatically correct?
I will be. . . or I am free the rest of today? For the first part, I would be inclined to use "I am free" unless there's a specified point at which you will become free, e g "After lunch, I will be free for the rest of the day" For the second, you certainly can use "today" instead of "the day" This is just preference, but "the day" sounds more natural unless you want to specify another day e g "I'm free the rest of today, or 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
Why is 10th May called an autumn day in South Africa? 10 May is an 'autumn day' in South Africa because on this day there was the largest gathering of international leaders on South African soil for the installation of the first democratic non-racial government
prepositions - Confusion regarding since vs for - English Language . . . The shop has been selling cakes since yesterday This form doesn’t work for times shorter than a day, because in standard English, people do not say things like “I went to the shops last hour ” (although you may hear this in some regional British dialects) more than one unit of time in the past: “since ~ ago”
What is the difference between within five to six days and within . . . Please supply the source of the quotes, or tell us whether you invented the two sentences yourself It seem unlikely that anyone would write "within 5 to six days" when the maximum limit is six days I could understand the indications "within 7 OR 10 days" Meaning the infected person could get sick any day between day 7 and day 10
phrase meaning - What does the past day mean exactly? - English . . . ‘In the past day’ is, at least in all dialects of English where I’ve encountered the term, generally synonymous with ‘in the past 24 hours’ It’s important to remember that ‘day’ in English means either a 24-hour period of time, or a calendar day, and the use of a particular article does not disambiguate the definition
possessives - {days days} worth of stuff? - English Language . . . Consider the case "It's around one day's worth of stuff" That is clearly correct and the singular possessive can be used "One day worth" would be wrong Therefore in the plural case, the plural possessive should be used: Three days' worth However, this is one of those punctuation rules that are very often broken and "Three days worth" is