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- Possessive s for referring to time - English Language Learners Stack . . .
In this case, it's common to say "the morning news" to refer to a TV news program that is broadcast in the mornings, or such programs in general "This morning's news" means something that was in the news this morning, one particular morning
- a morning greeting: is it morning, gmorning or neither?
Simple answer: The correct, formal greeting is "Good morning" (provided the current time of day is morning, then it would become "good afternoon")
- prepositions - in the morning vs on cold mornings - English . . .
Mornings, for example, only happen once a day The sentence concerns the occurrence of specific thing - when it happens It is not about the car being in the morning (that sounds silly) It is about what to do with your car when the cold morning occurs
- grammar - tomorrow morning vs. tomorrows morning - English Language . . .
I found a topic that appeared kind of difficult for me to summarize What's the key difference between quot;tomorrow morning quot; and quot;tomorrow's morning quot; or quot;night sleep quot; vs
- prepositions - In the morning VS on the morning - English Language . . .
We use in for mornings, months and years, and on for dates We use on for the days (Monday, Tuesday etc) We use at for time (At 7 o'clock in the morning on Sunday in March for example) Further reading here
- “in the morning” vs. “in morning” - English Language Learners . . .
Being past tense, if you had some other way to indicate the date, in the morning would be okay For example "I never received the files due on October 18th
- How to make phrase sentence about availability for a meeting
I am available all week except on mornings of Monday and Friday For option 1, it sounds like I am not available on entire Monday and morning of Friday For option 2, using morning twice is repetition I would appreciate if someone can comment on or rephrase these options
- Can we said last morning? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
That would be wrong if they had been discussing the mornings when they saw him and not the afternoons or evenings The last night, the last morning and the last night [something happened or of some event] is perfectly acceptable –
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