I wonder what the exact times of the following words are: morning, noon, afternoon, evening, night, mid-night. What's the difference between at night and in the night?
Usually we use the word "breakfast" in the morning to mean to eat something, but what word do we use to mean "afternoon breakfast" and "evening breakfast"?
Tomorrow morning, tomorrow afternoon, tomorrow evening and tomorrow night they all refer to different periods of the day after “today”. Whereas the possessive apostrophe is used in: a good night' s sleep (a good night of sleep) The possessive apostrophe replaces "of" and adds an "s" several good night s ' sleep (several good nights of sleep)
My train departs at 4 AM tomorrow Because here, if you say 'o'clock,' the next question will be when? Early morning or in the evening? However, what all I said is just in a general context. Special cases always do exist!
To greet a group, mixed in gender, we can say "Good morning/afternoon/evening, ladies and gentlemen." ("ladies" always comes first).
ELKHART — Ryan Varga was hired last May to be the new varsity boys basketball coach at Jimtown High School. Senior player Will Spurgeon got to know his new coach before his teammates. He had the ...
MSN: Thought of the day by Charles Spurgeon: 'A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes'
Thought of the day by Charles Spurgeon: 'A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes'