|
USA-MA-MIDDLEBORO Azienda Directories
|
Azienda News:
- Understanding as of, as at, and as from
I'd appreciate your assistance in helping me particularly understand how to use the phrase "as of" properly What is the proper interpretation of the following sentence? "I need you to get me all
- time - from June onwards or from June or on June . . .
Means that you will be transferred from() June and all the months following June I will be transferred to another branch from June Technically that the branch comes from June, but most people would understand that you mean that
- Meaning of by when used with dates - inclusive or exclusive
If, in a contract fr example, the text reads: "X has to finish the work by MM-DD-YYYY", does the "by" include the date or exclude it? In other words, will the work delivered on the specified date
- Is until inclusive or exclusive? - English Language Learners . . .
I sent an email to someone and got an auto-reply saying: I am out of the office until 09 15 2014 Does this mean he will be available on the morning of the 15th?
- On the last week or In the last week?
I'm planning a trip My plane lands on the 29th of August Should I say: I'll arrive on the last week of August or I'll arrive in the last week of August Web searches show that both prepositi
- in or on the 3rd week of July
First, I think you're correct when you say that in would be a better preposition than on for these examples As one commenter said, on is typically used when referring to a specific day (e g , on Monday, on the last day of the quarter, on her birthday, on the thirteenth)
- grammar - Which one is more idiomatic: until june this year . . .
@DavidK - Yes The UK Office of National Statistics, from where the Guardian must have got the figure, says 'Net migration for the UK in the year ending June 2022: Net international migration, which is the difference calculated between immigration and emigration within the same period, added to the UK population in the year ending (YE) June 2022 ' (my bold emphasis)
- As on 16 May vs. as of 16 May — which is correct?
They are both correct but mean different things in different situations As of May 16 indicates the start of something; from that time on, while as on May 16 is completely different
- 31th or 31st is correct? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
I just realized that I’ve never needed to use 31th or 31st in my four years English study So which one is correct, and what about other alternatives? 31th or 31st 101th or 101st 1001th or 10
- Before date versus by date - English Language Usage . . .
Although, by definition, “before Tuesday” actually means “by Monday at the latest”, many people still confuse “by” (up to AND including) and “before” (up to BUT excluding)
|
|