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  • At Night or In the Night? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The bottom line is "it's idiomatic" as mentioned but I can offer the below rationale: 1 The origin of "at night" to indicate a point of time and the usage of prepositions "in" and"at" In olden times, when the time expression "at night" was originated, night might have been thought as a point of time in the day because there wasn't any activity going on and people were sleeping that time
  • word choice - At the beginning or in the beginning? - English . . .
    Are both expressions "At the beginning" "In the beginning" valid and equivalent? The first "seems wrong" to me, but it has more Google results
  • Why is it on the inside and not in the inside?
    The expression "in the inside" appears to be logical (because insides are closed spaces with boundaries) but the more common expression is "on the inside " What’s the reason behind this usage?
  • Is “In following, . . . ” acceptable in place of “In the following,
    As you found in your research, this may be dialectal In British English, the is required to turn following into an adjective, rather than having it parsed as a verb In following [something] → the something is being followed In the following [something] → the something follows In following their officers’ orders, the Light Brigade charged into history In following examples, we learn
  • On Saturday afternoon or in the Saturday afternoon?
    The choice of prepositions depends upon the temporal context in which you're speaking "On ~ afternoon" implies that the afternoon is a single point in time; thus, that temporal context would take the entire afternoon as one of several different afternoons, or in other words, one would use "on" when speaking within the context of an entire week "In ~ afternoon" suggests that the afternoon is
  • idioms - What is the meaning of in the ether? - English Language . . .
    Ether, or æther, was the mysterious substance once thought to suffuse the universe and be the medium that propagated light (and radio waves once they were discovered) Before that, it was the material that suffused the realm of the Gods So, to say that something is in the ether means that it is something being communicated from place to place; it has no precise location, just as a radio
  • word choice - on the train or in the train? - English Language . . .
    Both, but they are used differently Being on the train is the most common use When you travel by train, you usually say that you are on the train If you want to describe your position, you could say that you are in the train, for example: The train has derailed, I have a broken leg You can find me in the train
  • word choice - In the market or on the market - English Language . . .
    Generally speaking, only the commodity itself is on the market, while the traders themselves and other aspects of the trade are in the market So one puts one’s pork bellies on the market at the lowest price in the market in the market : in the position of being a potential buyer <in the market for a house> on the market : available for purchase; also : up for sale <put their house on the
  • What do we call the “rd” in “3ʳᵈ” and the “th” in “9ᵗʰ”?
    Our numbers have a specific two-letter combination that tells us how the number sounds For example 9th 3rd 301st What do we call these special sounds?
  • What is the origin of in the zone or what zone is this about?
    The word "zone" has a lot of usage in professional sports In American football, a team tries to carry the football into the end zone [1] In American ice hockey, a team tries to move the puck into the end zone, or the attack zone, where it is easier to score a goal [2] I think that the idiom "in the zone" is connected to the concept of an end zone in professional sports [3] When a hockey





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