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  1. Oct 2, 2007 · Yes there is a difference. Night is a distinct period of day which is dark as opposed to morning and afternoon which are just periods of during daylight. Therefore you can say that something will occur "at night" (i.e. when it is dark) but not at morning or afternoon. For day, afternoon, morning, evening, etc. you use "during the" or "in the". P.

  2. May 13, 2007 · The accident happened at 5 a.m. in the morning of May 10. is wrong, because, of necessity, 5 a.m. is in the morning. Saying "a.m." and "in the morning" is tautology - redundant repetition. In all cases it was morning, the clock struck 5, and the accident occurred.

  3. Oct 10, 2017 · "Morning" on its own is used in its sense of one of the times of day — morning, afternoon, evening, night — and/or when being contrasted with another of them. That night the clouds were heavy with snow, and by morning the whole landscape was white. I sleep so badly that it's a relief when morning comes at last. Morning has broken…

  4. May 22, 2014 · Jan 4, 2017. #3. I was wondering whether we use on if the words morning, afternoon and evening is modified by a certain adjective to make people feel the it is more like a certain morning: I met her on the beautiful morning. (The time was beautiful and I met her that morning.) I lost my keys on a cold morning. (In that morning which I feel cold ...

  5. Nov 24, 2012 · "on mornings" is the plural of "on a morning". This means that "mornings" mean "no particular/any mornings" -yet if it is followed by "he went jogging" the information is unhelpful. Thus, to be used, [both singular and plural] must be qualified by phrase/clause (e.g. in Scotland /such as these / like these / when it is cold / in the winter / towards Easter / after it had rained etc.)

  6. Dec 11, 2012 · 2. I'm going to clean my room in the morning on Thursday. 3. I'm going to clean my room on Thursday morning. 4. I'm going to clean my room on the morning of Thursday. My personal preference would be to use #2/3 depending if you wanted to give the time first of day first, or the particular day. So if I wanted to emphasize morning I would use 2 ...

  7. Nov 13, 2010 · Er.S.M.M.Hanifa. Your second sentence is wrong. You can say "Let's go fishing this morning" (this morning-->today () Also correct, "Let's go fishing in the morning" (said the previous night, or on a day before your going fishing). Good luck!

  8. Sep 22, 2016 · Sep 22, 2016. #3. heypresto said: It depends on which morning you are talking about. If it's the morning of tomorrow, then 'tomorrow morning' is what you want. But you could say something like 'I met him last Tuesday evening, and then again the next morning.'. It's very clear now. Thank you, heypresto.

  9. Dec 3, 2010 · On Monday morning. P. Parla Member Emeritus. New York City. English - US Dec 3, 2010 #3 Yes ...

  10. Oct 15, 2013 · Oct 15, 2013. #7. I think it's a very difficult question to answer in the round. Given your example though - I have been darning socks all (the) morning - I'd say that there's virtually nothing added by the 'the', at least, nothing that I can detect. I agree with e2efour that the version with 'the' is the lesser-used form.