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  1. 2 ott 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. 13 mag 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. 19 feb 2008 · All the morning doesn't work here, but all morning-- i.e., without the article -- does. ==> I've been waiting here all morning... And I can see no difference between all morning and the whole morning in this context. Wait for more answers, though.

  4. 24 nov 2012 · I'm sorry I can't supply you with one. But I've just thought of a rule of thumb that might work: [on + mornings] but [in + the + morning] I like coffee in the morning. On mornings such as these, I'd rather stay in bed.

  5. 9 set 2016 · English - United States. Sep 9, 2016. #2. Early tomorrow morning is perhaps more common, and is probably what I'd say most of the time. Early in the morning tomorrow might be used if you wanted to emphasize morning for some reason. G.

  6. 11 gen 2019 · I went to visit him IN a cold morning. I went to visit him ON a cold morning. I went to visit him IN a dark night. I went to visit him ON a dark night. For the two pairs of sentences above, I cannot tell which one is incorrect from a non native speakers perspective. They all seem okay to me. May I ask what you guys think? Thank you!

  7. 3 gen 2017 · Tom said that he had got up too late that day and had to get up earlier (the) next day. But (the) next morning the same thing happened! If you have a preposition like 'in' or 'on' before 'next day', or 'following day', or specific day, you have to use 'the'. Your other question is different so it needs a new thread.

  8. 8 ott 2017 · Oct 8, 2017. #2. He came here in a morning. He came here on a morning. This as a stand-alone sentence is a little odd. It sounds incomplete: I would expect more information, for example: He came here on a lovely summer morning (to help me fix the roof, or whatever). Last edited: Oct 8, 2017.

  9. 18 set 2014 · e.g. Today is 2nd of June. I want to talk about "the morning before this morning" (in other words, the morning of 1st of June). I think "last morning" doesn't work here right? Only "yesterday morning" does. But interestingly, if today is in the 2nd week of June. Then using "last week" to talk about "the week before this week" works fine.

  10. 11 dic 2012 · I'm going to clean my room on Thursday in the morning. 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.