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  1. Sunday is understood to be a particular place in the week or in calendar time, hence on. On June 24th. On Sunday. Sunday evening and Sunday can both be fluid in their meaning, referring to either a duration of time: We waited for your call all Sunday evening. We waited for your call all evening, Sunday. We waited for your call all day, Sunday.

  2. Dec 23, 2019 · It's something I do on every Sunday. We normally don't use the preposition on" before time expressions beginning with each, every, next, last, this, etc. So the use of the "on" in the second sentence is unnecessary. Besides, if you say you do something on Sunday (s), Monday (s), etc. , it also conveys the sense that you do it on every Sunday ...

  3. Mar 25, 2019 · Sunday's is possessive in nature when you use the apostrophe. Use Sundays instead, unless you know someone named Sunday. See the difference below: If only all Sundays were so smooth. If only all Sunday's weather was so smooth. Share. Improve this answer. answered Mar 25, 2019 at 4:22. medicine_man.

  4. 1. If today is Sunday (or any day) and you say, "This Sunday" it means "this coming sunday." That is what "this Sunday" is short for. If you say, "next Sunday" it is referring to the following after a previously stated Sunday, or the following Sunday after "this Sunday" with the understanding that person you are talking to knows what this ...

  5. Apr 26, 2019 · This: On last Sunday morning. is grammatically correct, but wouldn't be used that often. Although you could say it, it would sound a bit strange and a native speaker mostly wouldn't use it. You would just say 'last Sunday morning', without the preposition. On the morning on last Sunday. This is also grammatically correct, but is really clunky ...

  6. Mar 20, 2018 · If you wanted to include Sunday and Saturday, you could say. Any day but Tuesday. but since it is your boss, it would probably be understood to mean the work week. You could also say. All week except for Tuesday. or. I’m not available on Tuesday, but any other day is fine.

  7. Aug 26, 2018 · [I have been asked by the OP to post my comment as an answer. Initially I decided not to because it had already been posted by Peter, but as I disagree with part of Peter's answer (see my comment below his answer), I thought it may be useful to post my own suggestions.]

  8. May 21, 2019 · 2. "Are you" is the present tense, while "will you be" is future continuous tense. Technically speaking then, the difference is that " are you free on Sunday " is asking somebody for their present plans or the current state of their diary for Sunday. Either they are currently free, or they are not. " Will you be free on Sunday " is asking if ...

  9. Mar 2, 2018 · In the context you give "week" means "working week" and so the "end of the week" would be on Friday. "The end of the week" does not always mean the same as "the weekend". And in a working context the last day of the (working week) is Friday. The language is imprecise and in a different context "the end of the week" could mean Saturday or even ...

  10. He left for Mumbai on Sunday (expecting) to arrive there on Monday. This would be said before the speaker learns that he arrived, so his arrival is an expectation not a fact. At the point of the statement, the speaker knew he left, so there is no reason not to use simple past.

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