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Holidays or holiday? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange At one time the only 'holiday' that ordinary people had were days such as Christmas, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Whit Monday etc These were Holy Days - holidays When workers won the right to annual leave entitlement, they began talking about their 'holidays' since there was more than one day of holiday involved
At a hotel or in a hotel - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In a comment responding to the original post, Eduardo advises the poster to add a verb in front of the phrases "at a hotel" and "in a hotel" to obtain a more precise idea of which phrase is more common
Is it “in” or “on the holidays”? - English Language Usage . . . Holiday breaks usually consist of more than one day, so when you refer to Christmas you are thinking about Christmas eve, Christmas day and Boxing day (also called ‘St Stephen's Day’) The Easter holiday is usually made up of two days; Easter Sunday and Easter Monday N B Good Friday is not a public holiday in Italy but it is in the UK
In school vs at school - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In this case, either one will work just fine, because children who are at school (on the school grounds) are also, by default, in school (in their classrooms) On a holiday, they are neither in school nor at school, so you can use either preposition without any loss of meaning The one exception may be if the football team had a Saturday practice