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- At night or In the night - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
What can I say about a thing happened at night? Someone stole my phone at night OR Someone stole my phone in the night Which one is right to say?
- When is afternoon? When is evening? When is night? Is there another . . .
I'm a beginner here, and I have a question about the evening night meal, and this is my first question It's evening The family is eating dinner From when until when is it considered to be "ev
- How do people greet each other when in different time zones?
I was puzzled by your question, then I worked out that you mean 'How do you greet a person who is in a different time zone from yours?' I suppose, if you know what time it is where they are, you use the greeting appropriate for them
- Late Night vs Early Morning [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
Can anyone explain me Difference between late night amp; early morning ? "I slept early morning" Is this sentence correct ? What time is called morning ? After 12:00 AM ?
- Evening and night in English - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
How exactly are the words 'evening' and 'night' used in English? Are there certain times when evening, and when night, are considered to begin? Do these periods overlap?
- politeness - Should I say have a good night at 5:00 PM? - English . . .
I would not say "Have a good night" except perhaps to somebody I was expecting to stay awake all night "Have a good evening" would be more suitable for those going to sleep at sensible hours A simple "Good night" would be a goodbye, in contrast to "Good morning" or "Good evening" as ways of saying hello, and I often use it at any time after
- word choice - Whats the difference between stay the night, sleep . . .
I don't think there is much to chose between 'stay the night' and 'stay for the night', but 'sleep over' is often used as a composite noun (sleep-over), to describe an arranged social gathering, usually for children and young teens Though I seem to remember it being claimed that Mrs Blair had attended a 'sleep-over' hosted by Rebecca Brookes, which caused some embarrassment
- single word requests - Precise names for parts of a day - English . . .
The set of words that refers to the sky is: dawn (sky is getting light), sunrise (exactly when the sun is first visible), day or daytime (between sunrise and sunset), sunset (exactly when the sun is last visible), dusk (sky is getting dark), night or nighttime (sky is dark)
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