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time and dates

We use phrases with prepositions as time adverbials:

• We use at with:

clock times: at seven o’clock - at nine thirty - at fifteen hundred hours


mealtimes: at breakfast - at lunchtime - at teatime

… and in these phrases:

at night - at the weekend - at Christmas - at Easter

• We use in with:

seasons of the year: in spring/summer/autumn/winter - in the spring


/summer/autumn/winter
years and centuries: in 2009 -in 1998 - in the twentieth century
months: in January/February/March etc.
parts of the day: in the morning - in the afternoon - in the evening.

• We use on with:

days: on Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday etc - on Christmas day - on my birthday.


dates: on the thirty first of July - on June 15th

Note: We say at night when we are talking about all of the night:

When there is no moon it is very dark at night.


He sleeps during the day and works at night.

but we say in the night when we are talking about a short time during the night:

He woke up twice in the night.


I heard a funny noise in the night.

We use the adverb ago with the past simple to say how long before the time of
speaking something happened:

I saw Jim about three weeks ago.


We arrived a few minutes ago.

We can put time phrases together:

We will meet next week at six o’clock on Monday.


I heard a funny noise at about eleven o’clock last night.
It happened last week at seven o’clock on Monday night.

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